| Literature DB >> 27795666 |
Jignesh Shah1, Erdem Arslan1, John Cirucci2, Julie O'Brien1, Dave Moss3.
Abstract
Alcohol ethoxylates surfactants are produced via ethoxylation of fatty alcohol (FA) with ethylene oxide. The source of FA could be either palm kernel oil (PKO) or petrochemicals. The study aimed to compare the potential environmental impacts for PKO-derived FA (PKO-FA) and petrochemicals-derived FA (petro-FA). Cradle-to-gate life cycle assessment has been performed for this purpose because it enables understanding of the impacts across the life cycle and impact categories. The results show that petro-FA has overall lower average greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions (~2.97 kg CO2e) compared to PKO-FA (~5.27 kg CO2e). (1) The practices in land use change for palm plantations, (2) end-of-life treatment for palm oil mill wastewater effluent and (3) end-of-life treatment for empty fruit bunches are the three determining factors for the environmental impacts of PKO-FA. For petro-FA, n-olefin production, ethylene production and thermal energy production are the main factors. We found the judicious decisions on land use change, effluent treatment and solid waste treatment are key to making PKO-FA environmentally sustainable. The sensitivity results show the broad distribution for PKO-FA due to varying practices in palm cultivation. PKO-FA has higher impacts on average for 12 out of 18 impact categories evaluated. For the base case, when accounted for uncertainty and sensitivity analyses results, the study finds that marine eutrophication, agricultural land occupation, natural land occupation, fossil depletion, particulate matter formation, and water depletion are affected by the sourcing decision. The sourcing of FA involves trade-offs and depends on the specific practices through the PKO life cycle from an environmental impact perspective.Entities:
Keywords: Alcohol ethoxylates; Cradle-to-gate analysis; Environmental impacts; Fatty alcohol; Greenhouse gases; LCA; Life cycle assessment; Malaysian palm; Oleochemicals; Palm kernel oil
Year: 2016 PMID: 27795666 PMCID: PMC5055910 DOI: 10.1007/s11743-016-1867-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Surfactants Deterg ISSN: 1097-3958 Impact factor: 1.902
Fig. 1Major process steps for the various fatty alcohol production pathways.
Adapted from [4]
‘Gate-to-gate’ LCI for fatty alcohol production and delivery
| Petro-FA | PKO-FA | Data sources | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Raw materials/feedstocks | |||
| | 0.778 kg | Petro: literature value by EI3.0 | |
| Ethylene | 0.177 kg | Petro: literature value by EI3.0 | |
| Natural gas | 0.0762 m3 | 0.0125 m3 | Petro: literature value by EI3.0; PKO: Adapted data from ECOSOL study by EI3.0 |
| Crude oil | 0.012 kg | Petro: literature value by EI3.0 | |
| Aluminum powder | 0.0083 kg | Petro: estimated by author based on stoichiometry | |
| Cobalt | 1.39E-5 kg | Petro: Estimated by author based on stoichiometry | |
| Palm kernel oil | 0.9999 kg | PKO: estimated by EI3.0 based on ECOSOL study data | |
| Hydrogen | 0.006 kg | PKO: estimated by EI3.0 based on ECOSOL study data | |
| Utilities and infrastructure | |||
| Water (cooling) | 0.024 m3 | 0.024 m3 | Assumed by EI3.0 based on literature for a large chemical plant |
| Water (process) | 0.006 m3 | 0.006 m3 | Estimated by EI3.0 as 25 % of the cooling water amount |
| Heat | 5.81 MJ | 11.83 MJ | PKO: estimated by EI3.0 based on ECOSOL study data |
| Electricity | 0.166 kWh | 0.161 kWh | |
| Transportation (road) | 0.06 tkm | 0.06 tkm | Updated by author based on the geographic scope |
| Transportation (ocean) | 0.0 tkm | 20 tkm | Updated by author based on the geographic scope |
| Chemical factory | 4E-10 plant | 4E-10 plant | Estimated by EI3.0 from a large chemical plant |
| Byproducts | |||
| Alumina | −0.0157 kg | Petro: Estimated by author based on stoichiometry | |
| Solid waste | |||
| Solid waste incinerated | 0.00339 kg | 0.0195 kg | Petro: literature value by EI3.0; PKO: Adapted data from ECOSOL study by EI3.0 |
| Direct air emissions | |||
| Carbon dioxide, fossil | 6.1E-5 kg | PKO: estimated by EI3.0 based on ECOSOL study data | |
| Non-methane volatile organic compounds | 2.05E-4 kg | PKO: estimated by EI3.0 based on ECOSOL study data | |
| Particulates, >10 µm | 7.95E-6 kg | Petro: literature value by EI3.0 | |
| Particulates, 2.5–10 µm | 1.07E-5 kg | Petro: literature value by EI3.0 | |
| Particulates, <2.5 µm | 6.21E-6 kg | Petro: literature value by EI3.0 | |
| Nitrogen oxides | 2.06E-4 kg | Petro: literature value by EI3.0 | |
| Ammonia | 1.68E-5 kg | Petro: literature value by EI3.0 | |
| Water vapor | 0.0105 kg | 0.0105 kg | EI3.0 calculated value based on literature values and expert opinion |
| Sulfur dioxide | 7.5E-4 kg | Petro: literature value by EI3.0 | |
| Carbon monoxide, fossil | 1.41E-4 kg | Petro: literature value by EI3.0 | |
| Direct water emissions | |||
| Wastewater effluent | 0.0195 m3 | 0.0195 m3 | EI3.0 calculated value based on literature values and expert opinion |
| Ammonium, ion | 8.42E-6 kg | Petro: literature value by EI3.0 | |
| COD, chemical oxygen demand | 1.2E-4 kg | 1.33E-3 kg | Petro: calculated by EI3.0 as 2*BOD5; PKO: Adapted data from ECOSOL study by EI3.0 |
| TOC, total organic carbon | 4.45E-5 kg | 4.93E-4 kg | Calculated by EI3.0 as COD/2.7 where COD is measured in g O2 |
Fig. 2Process steps for production of Palm Kernel Oil and average inputs and outputs (adapted from 10) About 400 m2 of land, diesel, pesticides, fertilizer and water are major inputs required to produce 1000 kg Fresh Fruit Bunches (FFB). Processing of thus produced FFB in Palm Oil Mill takes diesel and about 540 kg water. Also, about 3.4 GJ of energy in form of steam and electricity is needed, which is obtained through use of shells and fibers generated from the oil mill. About 150 kg of fiber and about 70 kg of shells are generated. Also, about 225 kg of empty fruit bunches (EFB) are generated, which are either mulched for fertilizer substitute for plantations or dumped to rot. About 829 kg of POME (effluent from palm oil mill) is generated and disposed of either via untreated river discharge or anaerobic digestion of BOD present. The methane from digestion could be used for energy generation, flared or vented. Of the remaining mass of inputs to the oil mill, about 215 kg becomes palm oil, about 27 kg becomes palm kernel oil (PKO) and rest about 33 kg becomes palm kernel extract (PKE) used as animal feed substitute. The treatment options for EFB and POME are the decision points for the individual plantations and shown via + symbol
Fig. 3Contributions of various life cycle phases to the Life cycle GHG emissions for PKO-FA (fatty alcohol produced from palm kernel oil feedstock) and petro-FA (fatty alcohol produced from petrochemical feedstock) are shown in kg CO2e/kg FA delivered. The various life cycle phases shown here are RMProdC2G, Transport C2G and FAProdG2G. RMProdC2G includes the raw material production (includes the impacts from the transformation of inputs from nature via various intermediate products into the raw material delivered to the fatty alcohol (FA) production site. RMC2G also includes any transportation required till RM reaches the FA production site. FAProdG2G includes the production of FA from raw materials (e.g., PKO and n-olefins and ethylene). TransportC2G includes the transportation of FA produced from the FA production site to Alcohol Ethoxylates (AE) production site. Irrespective of the feedstocks, RMProdC2G is the most impactful phase for the boundary covered in this study. It accounts for 60+ and 75+ % of the life cycle GHG emissions for PKO-FA and petro-FA, respectively
Fig. 4Results of various sensitivity analyses, namely, land use change (LUC), POME (wastewater effluent from palm oil mill) treatment, and EFB (empty fruit bunches) treatment, are shown in kg CO2e/kg FA delivered. The base case MY mix GHG emissions represent the typical practices for palm plantations in Malaysia (MY). For LUC, the practices for the base case are 13 % LUC from peat forest, 52 % from secondary forest and rest 35 % from existing cropland. Peat forest has the most GHG emissions, while they are the least for the transformation of existing cropland with carbon debt paid off. For POME treatment, the practices for the base case are 5 % of POME being used for generation of biogas for heat production and the rest 95 % being treated emitting the resulting biogas. The venting of biogas from anaerobic treatment has the most GHG emissions, while the anaerobic treatment with the resulting methane recovered and utilized for heat generation has the least. For EFB treatment, the practices for the base case are 75 % of EFB mulched and rest 25 % dumped to rot. Mulching of EFB for a fertilizer substitute shows the least life cycle GHG emissions, while the dumping of EFB to rot has the most
Comparing mean values (and coefficient of variation) results of all impact categories
| Impact category | Unit | Petro FA | PKO FA | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Average | SD | Average | SD | ||
| Agricultural land occupation | m2a | 4.25E-02 | 3.17E-02 | 1.82E+ 00 | 6.12E-01 |
| Climate change | kg CO2 eq | 2.97E+00 | 5.23E-01 | 5.27E+00 | 4.57E+00 |
| Fossil depletion | kg oil eq | 1.84E+00 | 3.93E-01 | 5.99E-01 | 1.30E+00 |
| Freshwater ecotoxicity | kg 1,4-DB eq | 2.14E-02 | 2.09E-01 | 4.16E-02 | 6.08E-01 |
| Freshwater eutrophication | kg P eq | 4.58E-04 | 3.03E-04 | 6.29E-04 | 1.85E-03 |
| Human toxicity | kg 1,4-DB eq | −7.75E-02 | 5.64E+01 | −9.19E+00 | 3.21E+02 |
| Ionizing radiation | kBq U235 eq | 1.56E-01 | 1.84E-01 | 8.78E-02 | 4.37E-01 |
| Marine ecotoxicity | kg 1,4-DB eq | 1.78E-02 | 1.69E-01 | 1.95E-02 | 4.18E-01 |
| Marine eutrophication | kg N eq | 3.29E-04 | 6.92E-05 | 1.30E-02 | 4.39E-03 |
| Metal depletion | kg Fe eq | 1.31E-01 | 8.07E-02 | 1.22E-01 | 8.87E-01 |
| Natural land transformation | m2 | 2.02E-04 | 1.26E-04 | 3.49E-02 | 1.14E-02 |
| Ozone depletion | kg CFC-11 eq | 1.02E-07 | 4.67E-08 | 5.86E-08 | 3.60E-07 |
| Particulate matter formation | kg PM10 eq | 3.70E-03 | 7.72E-04 | 8.59E-03 | 9.55E-03 |
| Photochemical oxidant formation | kg NMVOC | 1.32E-02 | 3.28E-03 | 1.56E-02 | 2.34E-02 |
| Terrestrial acidification | kg SO2 eq | 1.22E-02 | 3.11E-03 | 1.79E-02 | 2.29E-02 |
| Terrestrial ecotoxicity | kg 1,4-DB eq | 1.03E-04 | 1.45E-03 | 1.39E-01 | 3.95E+00 |
| Urban land occupation | m2a | 1.04E-02 | 3.37E-03 | 2.42E-02 | 2.80E-01 |
| Water depletion | m3 | 2.71E+00 | 5.27E-01 | 1.37E+00 | 7.25E+00 |
SD standard deviation
Fig. 5Results of uncertainty analyses (1000 runs of Monte Carlo using the in-built function in Simapro 8.0) for characterized impacts for PKO-FA (fatty alcohol produced from palm kernel oil feedstock) and petro-FA (fatty alcohol produced from petrochemical feedstock) are presented for all 18 evaluated impact categories as density plots. For PKO-FA, the distributions of impacts for all impact categories are broader compared to the narrow distribution for petro-FA. Marine eutrophication, agricultural land occupation, natural land occupation, fossil depletion, particulate matter formation, water depletion and climate change have the largest difference in the impacts between petro-FA and PKO-FA
Fig. 6Results of uncertainty analyses (1000 runs of Monte Carlo using the in-built function in Simapro 8.0) for characterized impacts for PKO-FA (fatty alcohol produced from palm kernel oil feedstock) and petro-FA (fatty alcohol produced from petrochemical feedstock) are presented for all 18 impact categories as a percentage of the samplings for which a particular option had lower impacts. For example, petro-FA has lower or equal GHG emissions for ~70 % of samplings and PKO-FA causes lower or equal water depletion for ~60 % of samplings
Fig. 7Literature data on the life cycle GHG (greenhouse gas) emissions for oil produced from Palm fruit in kg CO2e/kg oil produced. Depending on the operating practices, the GHG emissions as per this LCA study varies from −2.7 to 15.4 kg CO2e/kg oil produced. Such significant variances in the GHG emissions for PKO-FA were also observed by Stichnothe and Schuchardt [10] (0.6–22.2 kg CO2e/kg oil produced), Achten et al. (0.4–16.9 kg CO2e/kg oil produced) [17] and Schmidt and Dalgaard [29] (2.2–12.7 kg CO2e/kg oil produced). While the variances observed by Rejinders and Huijbergts [25] (5.2–9.6 kg CO2e/kg oil produced) and Wicke et al. [21] (1.3–3.1 kg CO2e/kg oil produced) were not equally large, their ranges are within those observed. The potential emissions estimated by Jungbluth et al. [11], as part of EcoInvent 3.0 dataset, also falls within the observed ranges
List of processes that are major contributors for the identified impact categories for both petro-FA and PKO-FA
| Petro-FA | PKO-FA | |
|---|---|---|
| Climate change | | Land use change for palm plantation |
| Fossil fuel depletion | | Fuel combustion (process, transportation |
| Natural land transformation | Oil extraction for | Land use change for palm plantation |
| Eutrophication | Sulfidic tailings for production of Copper used in chemical plants | Fertilizer use for palm plantations |
| Agricultural land occupation | Wood used for building material in chemical plants (<0.1 % of impacts for PKO-FA) | 99+% from palm plantations |
| Water depletion | Aluminum powder (~50 %) | Palm FFB growth |
| Particulate matter formation | | Palm FFB growth |