Plant-to-planet analysis of CO-based methanol processes

A critical assessment of methanol production from carbon dioxide and renewable hydrogen is here presented, gathering an insightful picture of its wide sustainability and establishing a hierarchy of factors dictating its performance. Process simulation and life-cycle analysis indicate that green meth...

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Published inEnergy & environmental science Vol. 12; no. 12; pp. 3425 - 3436
Main Authors González-Garay, Andrés, Frei, Matthias S, Al-Qahtani, Amjad, Mondelli, Cecilia, Guillén-Gosálbez, Gonzalo, Pérez-Ramírez, Javier
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 04.12.2019
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ISSN1754-5692
1754-5706
DOI10.1039/c9ee01673b

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Summary:A critical assessment of methanol production from carbon dioxide and renewable hydrogen is here presented, gathering an insightful picture of its wide sustainability and establishing a hierarchy of factors dictating its performance. Process simulation and life-cycle analysis indicate that green methanol is at present economically unattractive, i.e. , it has a 1.3-2.6-fold higher cost compared to the current fossil-based analogue, even when considering indirect environmental costs via monetisation of impacts and a potential CO 2 tax of at least 430.5 USD t CO 2 -eq −1 . This is mainly due to the high price of hydrogen (water electrolysis powered with solar, wind, and nuclear energy, or biomass gasification, up to 73% of the total cost), which shall drop significantly due to reductions in electricity costs and technological advances. The scenario radically changes when quantifying for the first time the absolute sustainability of this carbon capture and utilisation route through eight planetary boundaries, revealing that CO 2 -based methanol would contribute to operating safely within critical ecological limits of the Earth linked to carbon emissions, currently transgressed by the conventional process. Our plant-to-planet assessment embraces the full potential role of emerging processes in sustainable development, which should prevail over purely economic arguments, subject to market fluctuations and technological advances. The unprecedented application of planetary boundaries in chemical process assessment uncovers the otherwise unidentifiable potential of green methanol in establishing a sustainable industry.
Bibliography:2
Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available: Details and results of the modelling and life-cycle assessment of fossil- and CO
based methanol synthesis. See DOI
10.1039/c9ee01673b
ISSN:1754-5692
1754-5706
DOI:10.1039/c9ee01673b