Bio-fuel potential
Materials for biofuel production are
abundant in Vietnam. They include food energy crops such as corn, soy
bean, cassava, sugar cane (first generation), non-food energy crops such
as jatropha,
buffalo grass, algae and wastes from industry and agriculture such as
animal fats, left-over food, rice straw, rice husk etc. (second
generation).
Vietnam has recognized the potential for
second-generation biofuels and prioritized them in the country’s
biofuel development plans. The main feedstock for biofuel in Vietnam in
the period up to 2015 with outlook to 2025 were identified as: (1) used
fats and oils including used oils collected from food industries, (2)
algae, considering its low demand of land and ecological conditions and
short development cycle, (3) agricultural crops such as bagasses,
cereal, sesame, peanut, coconut, and basa fish fat, (4) jatropha which
can be grown on around 9 million hectares of bare land or land strips
along the national highways (Nguyen Duoc, Biodiesel Vietnam: potentials
and challenges, Viet Bao, 29 January 2010). These identified targets
will guide future investment in the sector.
Biofuel legislation
The legal framework for bio-fuel
production and trading in Vietnam is nearly complete. Bio-fuel has been
designated a key industry and bio-fuel production projects enjoy the
highest level of investment incentives.
From 2007 to 2010, Vietnam worked on
finalizing a legal framework to encourage the production and use of
bio-fuel, design the roadmap for using bio-fuels in Vietnam, learning
bio-fuel technologies, training human resources for this industry,
zoning and developing material areas for bio-fuel, build bio-fuel plants
to meet 0.4 percent of the country’s need for petrol by 2010. This
start-up work is basically on schedule.
In 2007, two national standards for
bio-ethanol and bio-diesel were issued. In October 2008, the Ministry of
Industry and Trade approved projects to grow trees as materials for
producing bio-fuels, to develop technologies for producing bio-fuels, to
design plans and policies to support the development of bio-fuels in
Vietnam and to test and apply ethanol petrol in Vietnam.
In June 2008, the Ministry of
Agriculture and Rural Development also approved a project to research
and develop jatropha bushes in Vietnam.
The Ministry of Finance in 2007 and 2008 issued two circulars on state funding for bio-fuel development programs.
In 2009, the Ministry of Science and Technology issued two national standards on bio-fuels.
From 2011-2015, according to planners,
Vietnam will begin to produce additives, enzymes and other materials for
bio-fuels and expand their production, develop new varieties of high
productivity, and expand biofuel plant capacity to satisfy 1 percent of
the country’s need for petrol by 2015.
From 2016 to 2025, Vietnam will build an
advanced bio-fuel industry that will produce 100 percent of the
national requirement for E5 and B5 fuels, i.e., will provide five
percent of the fuel needed to run the nation’s motor fleets.
Biofuel projects
Vietnam first began biofuel production
around 20 years ago. However, to date Vietnam has had only some initial
experience in research, pilot production and commercial production of
biofuel. The actual deployment is still far below the economic and
realizable potentials.
Prior to 2009 biofuel technologies in
Vietnam are generally old and inefficient. Equipments are out-of-date
and have low capacity and energy efficiency. Fuel collection rates and
productivity are low and the cost of operation is high relative to
productivity. Technologies used to mix biofuel with traditional fuel are
in early stages of development. At the same time skilled human resource
in this industry is still weak (Nguyen Phu Cuong, 2009).
On the demand side, biofuel is not
widely used in Vietnam yet. Sales and distribution of biofuel are still
in the pilot stage (Nguyen Phu Cuong, 2009).
However since the deployment of the Decision 177 of the Government on a “Scheme for Development of Biofuel up to 2015 with a vision to 2025”,
investments in biofuel research and production have increased. Biofuel
research is focused on biofuel technologies, application in electricity
generation and transportation use. Unlike the situation during 1990s
when researches were still spread on a broad scope and mainly focused on
lab or field research, which did not link to the market, research and
development of biofuel in recent years has been oriented towards
applying international and regional technological advancement into
Vietnam’s conditions. The government has invested in domestic research
capacity to advance the biofuel sector in accordance with the framework
of Project 177, as well as in other national and provincial funding
programs available for scientific and technological development of
Vietnam.
Pilot and commercial production has been
increasing in the last 5 years in which 2009 can be considered as the
year of the biofuel industry kick-off in Vietnam. During 2009 many
ethanol plants were built in Quang Nam, Phu Tho, Quang Ngai (Dung Quat),
Binh Phuoc and Dong Nai (To Quoc Tru, 2010). Investments have been
piled up from domestic enterprises including the Petrovietnam. It is
planned that by 2011, there will be 5 ethanol producers with a total
installed capacity of 365,000 tons per year - enough for mixing 7.3
million tons of E5 (Nguyen Phu Cuong, 2009).
For ethanol, some typical projects include:
1) Green Field Co.
Ltd.’s production of ethanol in Quang Nam Province: 100,000 tons/year,
fixed and working capital of US$ 44 million. This biofuel plant was
built in 2007 and began operating in 2008 (AITVN database). It was the
first bio-ethanol production plant in Vietnam (Nguyen Phu Cuong, 2009).
The project was supported by preferential loan from the Government of
VND 100 billion (~ US$ 550,000) to invest in a waste water treatment
system. Its ethanol product satisfies the national standard
TCVN-7116-2007; is guaranteed to be purchased fully by PVB a subsidiary
of PVOil/ Petrovietnam (Nguyen Phu Cuong, 2009).
2) Petrovietnam’s
production of ethanol 99, 7% from cassava and sugarcane in Phu Tho
Province: 100 million liters/year, total investment cost is US$ 85
million, ground breaking in 2009, planned to operate in 2010.
3) Petrovietnam’s
production of ethanol 99.7% from cassava in Dung Quat industrial zone:
100 million liters/year was built in 2009 and planned to operate in
2011.
4) Vietnam Bioethanol joint stock Co.’s production of ethanol in Dak Lak province: investment cost of US$ 60 million.
5) Saigon Petro’s
production of ethanol 99.7% from cassava: 40 million liters/year,
initial investment of US$ 5 million, operated in 2009.
6) Southern Biofuel
and Petrochemical joint stock Co.’s production of ethanol 99.5% in HCMC:
investment cost of US$ 2.1-2.7 million.
7) Petrosetco’s production of ethanol (in cooperation with Japan): 100 million liters/year, planned to operate in 2010.
Sources: AITVN’s database 2010 and others
For biodiesel, investments are spread on a broad range based on type of feedstock:
1) Fish fat: Minh Tu Co. Ltd’s in Can Tho City with investment cost of US$ 830,000, 2007-2009;
2) Jatropha: Dai Dong Co. Ltd’s planting of 50,000 ha jatropha in Ha Giang province, investment cost of US$ 187 million;
3) Jatropha: Saigon
Mang Den Co.’s planting of 5,000 hectares of jatropha in Kon Tum
Province at a total investment of US$2 million; Doan Minh Giang Co. in
Son La province; Hieu Giang Company with 170 hectares in Lam Dong
province; Minh Son Co. with jatropha nursery; Duc Viet Co.; Nui Dau Co.
in Lang Son province; Thien Nhien Co. in Phu Tho; SECOIN with jatropha
nursery and a number of agro-forestry cooperatives in Son La, Kon Tum
and Binh Thuan Province, etc;
5) Vietnam’s
Institute of Industrial Chemistry’s pilot project on technology and
equipment for planning an industrial scale factory producing B100 and
B5: investment cost US$3.7 million, 2010-2011.
Sources: AITVN’s database 2010 and others
Although not a complete list, the
activities mentioned above have depicted an active investment climate
for biofuel in the last few years after being catalyzed by the
Government Scheme in 2007 to develop biofuels (Decision 177). The
scheme has set the targets of producing 100,000 tons E5 per year and
50,000 tons of B5 per year by 2010, satisfying 0.4% fuel demand of the
country by that year and until 2025 biofuel production will be
sufficient to satisfy 5% of domestic fuel demand. The scheme sets 6
important tasks to develop and establish a market for biofuel
domestically and also on the world market.
Investments in biofuel today come from
both public and private sectors in which investment from Petrovietnam
and its subsidiaries have surpassed the investment from private
companies. Besides biofuel production has opened up market demands for
agricultural and other wastes which were not commercialized before.
Development of biofuel in the coming
years will continue be guided by the government’s Project 177 “Project
for Development of biofuel to 2015 with a vision to 2025” (Decision
177/2007/QD-TTg of the Prime Minister). Under the plan on bio-fuel
development to 2015 with a vision to 2025, Vietnam will produce 1.8
million tons of ethanol and vegetable oils for use as fuel annually,
meeting 5 percent of domestic petrol and diesel demand in the next 15
years. Support mechanisms such as state investment, subsidies, tax
preferences, and other capacity building programs will help investors to
reduce their investment risk and generate satisfactory returns on
capital.
In the next several years, however, there remain many challenges for biofuel development in Vietnam including:
1) Production cost is still high and the sector needs Government support to compete with subsidized cost of fossil fuels;
2) Infrastructure for production and distribution are not yet fully built out;
3)
Access to export market of biofuel requires strict compliance with
various quality standards and other environmental and social
requirements by importing countries that Vietnam does not have to
capacity to comply with yet;
4) Biofuel prices in Vietnam are still higher than that in neighboring countries (Nguyen Quang Khai, 2009).
Foreign investors have shown signs of
interest in Vietnam’s biofuel industry. Many development projects
sponsored by JICA, the Netherlands Government, and the Korean Government
have supported research pilot production of biofuel recently. The
US-based Golden State Biofuel alone has pledged a US$200 million
investment to develop 10 ethanol plants that utilize rice husk. The
plants will use equipment manufactured in the US (Global Trends in
Sustainable Energy Investment, 2010).
Vietnam is keen to engage in
international cooperation and foreign direct investment for development
of biofuel. Via these channels, Vietnam can mobilize both investment and
experiences from other countries to develop its biofuel sector. During
2007-2009, MOIT on behalf of the Government of Vietnam, entered into
cooperation protocols with Germany and Brazil on technical cooperation
in feedstock planning, technology transfer, distribution and
transportation system development, etc.
However, applications of foreign
technologies in Vietnam should be taken with care due to many reasons.
Firstly, not all technologies can be applied to Vietnam’s ecological
conditions. Secondly, biofuel technologies are costly which implies a
significant financial loss in case of failure. A stepwise development of
the technologies consisting of pilot production and then commercial
production is needed.
(Source : Copyright © GIZ Renewable Energy Project)
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