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Waste to power: ARENA seeks bioenergy submissions

Elizabeth Gracie
Bioenergy accounts for up to 4 per cent of Australia's energy mix, compared to 10 per cent in Europe. ARENA has been asked by the Government to examine the possibility of using industrial, agricultural, and residential waste products into usable, high-value energy, and is now calling for submissions.

This, in turn, will be used to create a Bioenergy Roadmap, helping the Australian Federal Government build its bioenergy sector to produce clean energy, and produce new job opportunities in an effort to stimulate the economy. 

Bioenergy uses organic and renewable materials that can produce a range of energy outputs including heat, electricity, gas and liquid fuels, reducing emissions significantly if it were used as an alternative energy source to coal or gas.

However, when compared to the emissions of producing energy from solar or wind, burning waste products releases more carbon into the atmosphere.

By turning excess materials into energy, it also foregoes the potential other uses of the materials. Professor Veena Sahajwalla, the founder of the UNSW Centre for Sustainable Materials Research and Technology, told The Guardian, ““It is not a good idea to burn materials for the purpose of generating energy,” Sahajwalla says.

“If you are using something and then, after a single life, saying, ‘I’m done with it and I’m going to burn away the fundamental molecules and elements and everything else to release a bit of energy’, then that’s not good,” she says.

“If we are burning it away, then we are not trying hard enough to see what are the different ways to repurpose by processing things in different ways and transforming them.”

Minister for Energy and Emissions Reduction Angus Taylor hopes that the focus on bioenergy will aid in the mission to increase energy security in Australia, “bioenergy has the potential to grow as a future energy source in Australia, providing dispatchable energy while at the same time improving our fuel security and playing a role in reducing emissions”

The Roadmap will also focus on economic opportunities, including the potential decarbonisation of the industrial and transport sectors, strengthening Australia’s liquid fuel security in the process. 

“A strong bioenergy industry can also help to support our local farmers and bring more economic growth to regional areas”, said Taylor. 

$118 billion has already been invested by the Australian Government to further develop bioenergy projects just as the Roadmap in a variety of areas ranging from waste and biogas to biomass and biofuels. 

Taylor notes that “with the appropriate settings and pathways, the bioenergy sector can provide many benefits for Australia such as safeguarding soil and water quality and making productive use of waste resources”.

The Bioenergy Roadmap is due for completion in the second half of 2020. 
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