| Literature DB >> 30305674 |
Colin M Beal1,2, Léda N Gerber2, Supis Thongrod3, Wutiporn Phromkunthong4, Viswanath Kiron5, Joe Granados2, Ian Archibald2,6, Charles H Greene2,7, Mark E Huntley8,9.
Abstract
A method is described for saving 30% of the world fish catch by producing fishmeal and fish oil replacement products from marine microalgae, the natural source of proteins and oils in the marine food web. To examine the commercial aspects of such a method, we adapt a model based on results of microalgae production in Hawaii and apply it to Thailand, the world's fourth largest producer of fishmeal. A model facility of 111 ha would produce 2,750 tonnes yr-1 of protein and 2,330 tonnes yr-1 of algal oil, at a capital cost of $29.3 M. Such a facility would generate $5.5 M in average annual net income over its 30-year lifetime. Deployment of 100 such facilities in Thailand would replace all domestic production of fishmeal, 10% of world production, on ~1.5% of the land now used to cultivate oil palm. Such a global industry would generate ~$6.5 billion in annual net income.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30305674 PMCID: PMC6180066 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-33504-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Technology process lineup for fishmeal and fish oil replacement products from algae.
Energy and material flows. Energy impacts are global averages[14] and prices are based on Thailand market prices[16,17].
| Inputs | Value (X) | Energy Impact (MJ/d) | Cost/Revenue ($/d) | GHG Impact* | GHG | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cultivation | |||||||
| Water Supply Electricity (MJ/d) | 27,300 | 72,300 | 606 |
| 4,770,000 | ||
| Volume Transfer Electricity (MJ/d) | 7,210 | 19,100 | 160 |
| 1,260,000 | ||
| PBR Airlift Circulation Electricity (MJ/d) | 12,800 | 34,000 | 286 |
| 2,250,000 | ||
| Pond Circulation Electricity (MJ/d) | 33,600 | 89,000 | 746 |
| 5,880,000 | ||
| Nutrient Stock Tank Mixer (MJ/d) | 564 | 1,490 | 12.5 |
| 98,700 | ||
| Carbon Dioxide Consumed (kg/d) | 49,400 | 440,000 | 3,710 |
| 45,000,000 | ||
| Ammonia Consumed (kg/d) | 1,540 | 62,500 | 701 |
| 3,220,000 | ||
| DAP Consumed (kg/d) | 537 | 15,400 | 221 |
| 790,000 | ||
| PBR Plastic (m2/d) | 3,060 | 6,160 | 1,440 |
| 833,000 | ||
|
| |||||||
| Harvesting | |||||||
| Pump Secondary Sludge (MJ/d) | 26.7 | 70.6 | 0.59 |
| 4,660 | ||
| Filter Press Operation (MJ/d) | 1,110 | 2,950 | 24.8 |
| 195,000 | ||
|
| |||||||
| Extraction | |||||||
| Extraction Electricity (MJ/d) | 1,460 | 3,860 | 32.3 |
| 255,000 | ||
| Ethanol (kg/d) | 201 | 9,220 | 87.8 |
| 219,000 | ||
| Acetyl Chloride (kg/d) | 60.0 |
| 7,420 | 48.4 |
| 460,000 | |
| Extraction Heat (MJ/d) | 184,000 | 239,000 | 827 |
| 14,700,000 | ||
| Solvent Consumed (kg/d) | 101 | 2,240 | 446 |
| 32,200 | ||
| Cooling Water (m3/d) | 4.47 | 22.3 | 2.74 | 0 | |||
| Steam (kg/d) | 30.3 | 84.9 | 0.09 | 0 | |||
|
| |||||||
|
| |||||||
| Outputs | |||||||
| Lipids (kg/d) | 6,710 | 356,000 | 12,100 | NA | NA | ||
| Non-lipid Biomass (kg/d) | 13,500 | 339,000 | 18,900 | NA | NA | ||
|
| |||||||
*GHG impacts not shown for PVC (2,090 g CO2e/kg), transport of materials and waste (170 g CO2e/tkm), and waste disposal (130 g CO2e/kg).
TEA results and life-cycle greenhouse gas emissions for algae production in Thailand for fishmeal and fish oil replacements.
| Results | Mean Value | Uncertainty Range |
|---|---|---|
| NPV (Year 30) | $26.9 M | −$9.34 M–$40.0 M |
| EROI | 0.69 | 0.50–0.78 |
| GHG Emissions (kg CO2e/kg algae) | 3.96 | 3.29–4.34 |
The uncertainty ranges are given considering the 5% and 95% quantiles of the Monte-Carlo results.
Figure 2Energy return on investment (EROI) for this study* and a variety of feed and food protein products. Data from [Weidema[14]; Beal[8]; de Vries[32]; USDA[33]; Mitchell and Cleveland[28]].
Figure 3Uncertainty analysis using a boxplot representation for (a) the net present value (b) the EROI and (c) the GHG emissions. The black line in the middle of the colored area represents the median. The inferior and superior limit of the colored area represent the 25% and 75% quantiles, respectively. The inferior and superior limits of the red bars represent the 5% and 95% quantiles, respectively.