Application of Biogas and Biomethane as Maritime Fuels: A Review of Research, Technology Development, Innovation Proposals, and Market Potentials
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- “1st Generation: The source of carbon for the biofuel is sugar, lipid or starch directly extracted from a plant. The crop is actually or potentially considered to be in competition with food.”
- “2nd Generation: The biofuel carbon is derived from cellulose, hemicellulose, lignin or pectin. For example, this may include agricultural, forestry wastes or residues, or purpose-grown non-food feedstocks (e.g., Short Rotation Coppice, Energy Grasses).”
- “3rd Generation: The biofuel carbon is derived from aquatic autotrophic organisms (e.g., algae). Light, carbon dioxide and nutrients are used to produce the feedstock “extending” the carbon resource available for biofuel production.”
2. Regulations, Legislation, and Their Link to Market-Based Measures and ESG
- Revised EU ETS (aims to involve shipping in EU carbon trading);
- FuelEU Maritime (a new regulation about sustainable maritime fuels to help the transition to low carbon maritime fuels, such as biogas as it is a renewable energy source (RES));
- The revised Energy Taxation Directive (to end tax exemptions for conventional marine fuels and incentivise the uptake of alternatives. For example, bunker fuels sold in the EU for intra-EU voyage are no longer tax exempt);
- The revised Renewable Energy Directive (RED II) (introduces a target of at least 40% share of renewable energy and a GHG intensity reduction target of at least 13% by 2030 in the transport sector. It maintains the multiplier for renewable energy used by ships);
- EU Maritime MRV Regulation (requires the inclusion a lifecycle analysis methodology for fuels and common principles for fuel monitoring, verification, and accreditation. The existing EU MRV system will build upon the new EU THETIS reporting database);
- Alternative Fuel Infrastructure Directive (AFID) (seeks to raise the availability of LNG by 2025 and shore-side electricity supply in main EU ports (determined by number of calls per year) by 2030);
- Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) (seeks to avoid “carbon leakage”, which either occurs “when industries transfer polluting production to other countries with less stringent climate policies, or when EU products are replaced by more carbon-intensive imports”. Carbon leakage can, therefore, undermine the EU’s climate change efforts).
2.1. Market-Based Measures of Gaseous Biofuels
2.2. Environmental, Social, and Governance Strategies of Gaseous Biofuels
3. PESTEL and SWOT Analysis of Biogas and Biomethane
4. Availability, Supply Chain, and Cost Breakdown
4.1. Regional Availability
4.2. The Biomethane WtW Supply Chain
4.3. Cost Breakdown for Biomethane to Vessel and/or to Port
5. Applicability for the Maritime Industry
5.1. Shore-Side Electricity
5.2. World Fleet and Projections
6. Biogas and Biomethane Pollutant Emissions Performance in Dual-Fuel Compression-Ignition Marine Engines
7. The Benefits of Biogas Upgrade to Biomethane
- High CO2 content that limits power output;
- H2S is acidic, which can damage the engine in a very short period;
- High residual moisture, which can impact ignition (during ICE start-up);
- Gas composition variation in quality and pressure;
- Damage of engine parts due to the combustion of siloxanes.
Biogas to Biomethane Upgrading Pathways
8. Conclusions
- Sustainability and availability in relation to the complete supply chain;
- High production costs compared to their fossil counterparts;
- Applicability of biomethane and biogas in the maritime industry.
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
CA | Chemical absorption |
CBM | Compressed biomethane |
CNG | Compressed natural gas |
CII | Carbon Intensity Index |
CSR | Corporate social responsibility |
DNV | Det Norske Veritas |
DWT | Deadweight tonnage |
ECA | Emission control area |
EEDI | Energy Efficiency Design Index |
EEXI | Energy Efficiency Existing Ship Index |
EGR | Exhaust gas recirculation |
ESG | Environmental, social, and governance |
ETS | Emissions Trading Schemes |
GHG | Greenhouse gases |
HFO | Heavy fuel oil |
ICE | Internal combustion engine |
IMO | International Maritime Organization |
LBM | Liquefied biomethane |
LCA | Life cycle assessment |
LCC | Life cycle costing |
LNG | Liquefied natural gas |
LPG | Liquefied propane gas |
MARPOL | International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution from Ships |
MBMs | Market-based measures |
MEPC | Marine Environment Protection Committee |
MGO | Marine gas oil |
MS | Membrane separation |
NEB | Net energy balance |
NECA | Nitrogen emission control area |
OPEX | Operational expenditure |
PESTEL | Political, economic, social, technological, environmental, and legal factors |
PSA | Pressure swing adsorption |
RED | Revised Renewable Energy Directive |
RES | Renewable energy source |
RTDI | Research, technology, development, and innovation |
SECA | Sulphur emission control areas |
SEEMP | Ship energy efficiency management plan |
SECA | Sulphur emission control area |
SSE | Shore-side electricity |
SWOT | Strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats |
TRL | Technological readiness level |
ULSFO | Ultra-low sulphur fuel oil |
VLSFO | Very low sulphur fuel oil |
WS | Water scrubbing |
WtT | Well-to-tank |
WtW | Well-to-take |
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Factor | Key Drivers | Implications on Gaseous Biofuels |
---|---|---|
Political | Governments adding political pressure and incentives for the promotion and use of biofuels by the shipping industry | Formation of general policies (such as from the IMO or the European Commission) that may be beneficial in the scale-up and development of biogas in one country, but may not be as beneficial in another country. |
Economic | Investment of the shipping industry in the use of gaseous biofuels | Also highlighted within the technological factor, the shipping industry is investing (and actively participating) in RTDI technologies. |
MBMs | Economic incentives based on MBMs (such as the ETS, i.e., reduction of carbon penalties/tax) will help the uptake of gaseous biofuels by the shipping industry. These activities are also driven and related to the minimisation of EEDI, EEXI, and CII. | |
Socio-cultural | ESG | Gaseous biofuels will enable organisations to minimise their impact on climate change and global warming, and thus demand on gaseous biofuels will increase. Improve image of shipping industry in terms of social criteria to achieve sustainability. |
Technological | Biogas combustion | Biogas combustion can be used for land-based applications. Therefore, in terms of shipping, biogas could be used for shore-side electricity. |
Upgrading of biogas to biomethane | Upgrading needed to remove impurities, which when combusted are toxic to the environment and human health, and also reduce the lifetime of components in an ICE engine (see Section 7). | |
Participation of stakeholders of the shipping industry in RTDI activities | Large activity in RTDI projects involving gaseous biofuels and their supply chain issues and upgrading of biogas to biomethane (such as BioCH4-to-Market [27], BioCNG-to-Cold Ironing [28], Accelerating deployment of low-LCI Biomethane in shipping [29], Salamander project [30], and FirstBio2Shipping [31]). The shipping industry also actively participates in these activities, for example, by providing critical access to infrastructure for testing, benchmarking, and validation. | |
Environmental | Inclusion of additional areas under ECA/SECA/NECA | Stricter regulations on existing ECA/SECA/NECA areas, such as the Baltic Sea. For example, according to Marine Environment Protection Committee, MEPC 79, as of 2025 the Mediterranean Sea has now been included as a SECA and Particulate Matter control area [32]. In this respect, biomethane can contribute to the reduction of GHG and harmful pollutants (combusting biomethane has no SOx emissions and very low PM emissions). However, after-treatment in Nox emissions will be needed. In addition, further inclusion of additional areas will further expose the shipping industry to more stringent conditions. |
ESG | Organisations will need to illustrate their environmental criteria, which creates opportunities for inclusion of biogas/biomethane into the net zero carbon transition plan. | |
Legal | Lack/incomplete missing framework from IMO regarding gaseous biofuels | Utilisation of existing LNG/CNG framework for biomethane. |
At European level, the Green Deal and the recent Fit for 55 legislation package | The directives listed in Section 1 will impose carbon penalties to the shipping industry. Utilisation of gaseous biofuels will minimise the impact. | |
Inclusion of additional areas under ECA/SECA/NECA | See above discussion. | |
ESG | At the moment ESG reporting is voluntary, but in the near future they may become obligatory. Hence, organisations may be forced to use biogas/biomethane. |
Region | Percentage Upgraded (%) | ~USD/MBtu (2018) Biomethane | ~USD/MBtu (2018) Natural Gas |
---|---|---|---|
North America | 15 | 14.5 | 4.0 |
South America | 35 | 12.5 | 5.2 |
Europe | 10 | 16.0 | 7.5 |
Asia | 2 | 17.5 | 10.0 |
Status | LNG | Percentage LNG to World Fleet (%) | LPG | Percentage LPG to World Fleet (%) | Total World Fleet |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
In-service (500 DWT) | 791 | 1.14 | 52 | 0.075 | 69,130 |
In-service (5000 DWT) | 656 | 0.95 | 49 | 0.070 | 69,130 |
Newbuildings * (500 DWT) | 746 | 18.50 | 87 | 2.16 | 4033 |
Newbuildings * (5000 DWT) | 696 | 17.26 | 87 | 2.16 | 4033 |
Gas Component | Raw Biogas | Upgraded Biomethane | Natural Gas |
---|---|---|---|
Methane, CH4 (%) | 45.0–70.0 | 94.0–99.9 | 93.0–98.0 |
Carbon Dioxide, CO2 (%) | 25.0–45.0 | 0.1–4.0 | 1.0 |
Nitrogen, N2 (%) | <3.0 | <3.0 | 1.0 |
Oxygen, O2 (%) | <2.0 | <1.0 | – |
Hydrogen, H2 (%) | <1.0 | Traces | – |
Hydrogen Sulfide, H2S (ppm) | 20.0–20,000.0 | <10.0 | – |
Ammonia, NH3 (%) | Traces | Traces | – |
Ethane, C2H6 (%) | – | – | <3.0 |
Propane, C3H8 (%) | – | – | <2.0 |
Siloxanes (%) | Traces | – | – |
Water, H2O (%) | 2.0–7.0 | – | – |
Technology | Process | Issues | Maturity/Technological Benefits |
---|---|---|---|
1. Membrane separation (MS) | Utilisation of membranes that have a strong selectivity in separation, i.e., permeable to CO2, H2O, and NH3 with less permeability to O2 and H2S (these are referred to as the “permeate” flow; pass through the micro-pores and are removed), and little permeability to CH4 and N2 (these are referred to as the “retantate” flow pass through the membrane without being removed). There are three main categories for membranes based on materials: 1. Polymeric, 2. inorganic, and 3. mixed matrix. | Efficiency of membrane depends on moisture levels. | Available to market. Ardolino et al. [9] mentioned that on a LCA and LCC, the MS method has the optimal performance compared to the other available methods. Characterised by energy efficiency, simple construction, and easy scale-up. Modular and versatile nature of membrane. |
2. Water scrubbing (WS) | Separation is based on the different solubility of CO2 and CH4 in water. Thus, WS is favoured at low temperatures and high pressures as CO2 dissolves faster into water in the adsorption column. Some CH4 may exist after the adsorption process, and so the mixture is sent to a flash column, where an appropriate pressure drop is applied to release the remaining CH4. The CO2 is then released in the desorption column. The water is then recycled for more stable operation and less operational problems. | Methane slip of the order of 1–2%. Difficult to produce “highly purified gas” under standard conditions without the need of external pressure. When operating at low pressures (near atmospheric conditions), installations are limited to small sizes due to the large liquid-to-biogas flow ratios. | Available to market due to simplicity and performance reliability, but with high electricity costs. Therefore, the process operates at “near atmospheric conditions” to reduce electricity demand. |
3. Chemical absorption (CA) | Similar operating principle to WS but CA uses organic amine solvents rather than water. Note that amine solvents, found in the absorber, are more selective in absorbing CO2 compared to water. The amine solvent is also recycled into the absorber as it: (i) utilises the heat from the heat exchanger as the absorber process requires thermal energy, and (ii) CO2 is removed by the stripper. | Still developing to improve CO2 solubility. | Available to market. Smaller units compared to WS as they can absorb more CO2 per unit volume. CA can operate at atmospheric pressure, and thus with less energy consumption. CO2 and H2S are removed simultaneously. |
4. Pressure swing adsorption (PSA) | The PSA method separates gases via their physical properties. The raw biogas is compressed at an elevated pressure and fed into the pressure swing adsorption column, which retains CO2, but not CH4. When CO2 is saturated, it is removed via desorption in the purge gas and removed as waste gas. The PSA unit is composed of PSA columns connected in series to ensure continuous operations. | PSA technology has the lowest efficiency recovery. Methane slip varies from 1.8% to 2.0%. In addition, further gas treatment is needed to avoid the release of emissions to the environment. High energy cost; 77% of operational cost is spent on electricity. | Available to market. Could be the technology of the future, but currently cost is prohibitive due to additional gas treatment and innovative use of materials and hybrid systems (such as Zeolite 5A to purify the gas at first stage). |
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Mallouppas, G.; Yfantis, E.A.; Ioannou, C.; Paradeisiotis, A.; Ktoris, A. Application of Biogas and Biomethane as Maritime Fuels: A Review of Research, Technology Development, Innovation Proposals, and Market Potentials. Energies 2023, 16, 2066. https://doi.org/10.3390/en16042066
Mallouppas G, Yfantis EA, Ioannou C, Paradeisiotis A, Ktoris A. Application of Biogas and Biomethane as Maritime Fuels: A Review of Research, Technology Development, Innovation Proposals, and Market Potentials. Energies. 2023; 16(4):2066. https://doi.org/10.3390/en16042066
Chicago/Turabian StyleMallouppas, George, Elias Ar. Yfantis, Constantina Ioannou, Andreas Paradeisiotis, and Angelos Ktoris. 2023. "Application of Biogas and Biomethane as Maritime Fuels: A Review of Research, Technology Development, Innovation Proposals, and Market Potentials" Energies 16, no. 4: 2066. https://doi.org/10.3390/en16042066
APA StyleMallouppas, G., Yfantis, E. A., Ioannou, C., Paradeisiotis, A., & Ktoris, A. (2023). Application of Biogas and Biomethane as Maritime Fuels: A Review of Research, Technology Development, Innovation Proposals, and Market Potentials. Energies, 16(4), 2066. https://doi.org/10.3390/en16042066