CCM>Market Reports>
| No. | 0061B001 | Biofuels Market in China - Edition(1) |
About This Report:
| Report edition: | 2009 edition(1) | |
| Language version: | English | |
| Document type: | PPT document with additional Excel Document | |
| For ready report -- | ||
| Finished in: | Aug 2009 ,edition(1) | |
| Total pages: | 120 | |
| Delivery: | Delivery within 1-1 work days by email | |
| Price/copy: | - USD8000.00 for single user | |
| -USD20000.00 for corporate license/site license |
| For update report -- | ||
| Delivery time: | Delivery within 20-40 work days upon confirmation | |
| Price/copy: | - USD10000.00 for single user PDF | |
| - USD25000.00 for corporate license/site license |
* The corporate license/site license is only for the sole and confidential use within the subscriber company and its affiliates in which the subscriber company owns, directly or indirectly, a fifty percent or greater, financial interest.
Report Edition List:
| Version | Finished in | Availability | Language | Pages | Delivery | Price/Copy (For single user) |
| update report | - | update on request | English | - | within 20-40 work days upon confirmation | USD10000.00 |
Description:
"The rapidly developing Chinese biofuel market has been the hotspot in the past few years since the renewable biofuel is of great importance to relieve energy shortage in the future. To figure out the current situation and prospect of biofuel in China, this report widely covers information about feedstock and their production situation, competitive analysis, future forecast, governmental policies and main producers, etc.
Owning to technology bottleneck and food security concern, biofuel production has encountered barriers, especially fuel ethanol production in China. At present, the second-generation biofuel, namely cellulosic fuel ethanol, has attracted the most attention. In China, most biofuel manufacturers are domestic enterprises and major fuel ethanol producers are large-size state-owned enterprises who have receive great support from the government, while some biodiesel producers are private manufacturers.
Biofuel industry in China is enjoying promising prospect and CCM provides you an insightful analysis on the following aspects.
To provide an overview of biofuels industry in China;
To survey current production situation of biofuels;
To discuss the influence of governmental regulation on biofuels industry;
To assess China’s technology level of biofuels production;
To know the feedstocks of biofuels production;
To find out drivers behind the development of biofuels;
To understand the position of biofuels sector in China's energy industry ;
To forecast the future of China's biofuels industry;
To identify commercial opportunities in China’s biofuels market;
To assess the key players of biofuels in China, including producers and end users.
Main Content:
| No. | Content | Page |
| Executive summary | 1 |
|
| Source and methodology | 3 |
|
| I | Overview of biofuel industry in China | 6 |
| I-1 | Development situation of biofuel industry in China | 6 |
| I-2 | Position of biofuels sector in energy industry in China | 7 |
| II | Feedstock supply | 8 |
| Executive summary | 8 |
|
| II-1 | Introduction to food feedstock | 9 |
| II-2 | Introduction to non-food feedstock | 22 |
| II-3 | Introduction to oilseeds | 30 |
| II-4 | Introduction to cellulosic raw materials | 36 |
| II-5 | Energy crops | 40 |
| II-6 | Waste oil | 41 |
| III | Biofuels in China | 43 |
| Executive summary | 43 |
|
| III-1 | First-generation biofuels | 46 |
| III-1.1 | Fuel ethanol | 46 |
| III-1.2 | Biodiesel | 53 |
| III-1.3 | Biobutanol | 58 |
| III-1.4 | Other biofuels | 60 |
| III-2 | Second-generation biofuels | 62 |
| III-2.1 | Production situation of second-generation biofuels | 62 |
| III-2.2 | R&D situation of second-generation biofuels | 63 |
| III-2.3 | Future prospect | 64 |
| III-3 | Third-generation biofuels | 65 |
| III-3.1 | Production situation of third-generation biofuels | 65 |
| III-3.2 | R&D situation of third-generation biofuels | 66 |
| III-3.3 | Future prospect | 67 |
| III-4 | Fourth-generation biofuels | 68 |
| IV | Processing technologies in biofuel industry | 69 |
| Executive summary | 69 |
|
| IV-1 | Enzymatic hydrolysis | 70 |
| IV-2 | Fermentation | 73 |
| IV-3 | Transesterification | 75 |
| IV-4 | Pyrolysis & gasification | 76 |
| IV-5 | Others processing technologies | 77 |
| IV-6 | Research institutes and technology transfer | 77 |
| V | Governmental regulations on biofuel industry and their influence | 80 |
| Executive summary | 80 |
|
| V-1 | Regulations on feedstock | 82 |
| V-2 | Environmental regulations | 83 |
| V-3 | Subsidies and incentives | 85 |
| V-4 | Restrictions | 86 |
| V-5 | Other regulations | 87 |
| VI | Competitiveness landscapes | 91 |
| VII | Future forecast to the next 5~10 years | 94 |
| VII-1 | Key factors influencing biofuel industry in China | 94 |
| VII-2 | Forecast on biofuel industry | 96 |
| VIII | Conclusion and opportunities | 98 |
| VIII-1 | Conclusion | 98 |
| VIII-2 | Opportunities | 100 |
| IX | Appendix | 101 |
| IX-1 | Profiles of major fuel ethanol manufacturers | 101 |
| IX-1.1 | Henan Tianguan Group Co., Ltd. | 101 |
| … | … | |
| IX-1.7 | Zhejiang Haoqi Biomass New Energy Technology Co., Ltd. | 108 |
| IX-2 | Profiles of major biodiesel manufacturers | 109 |
| IX-2.1 | Sichuan Gushan Group | 109 |
| … | … | |
| IX-2.10 | Hebei Dong'an Industrial Co., Ltd. | 117 |
| IX-3 | Profiles of major biobutanol manufacturers | 118 |
| IX-3.1 | Hebei CNCP Huaying Co., Ltd. | 118 |
| IX-3.2 | Jilin Cathay Industrial Biotech Co., Ltd. | 119 |
LIST OF TABLES
Table I Exchange rate of USD against RMB, 2004~2009Table II-1 Corn planting areas of different provinces in China, 2009Table II-2 Corn yield in China, 2004~2009Table II-3 Supply & demand situation of corn in China, 2004~2009 (million tonnes)Table II-4 Price trend of corn in China, 2004~2009Table II-5 Forecast on situation of corn in China, 2010~2014Table II-6 Wheat planting area of different provinces in China, 2009Table II-7 Wheat yield in China, 2004~2009Table II-8 Supply & demand situation of wheat in China, 2004~2009 (million tonnes)Table II-9 Price trend of wheat in China, 2004~2009Table II-10 Forecast on wheat situation in China, 2010~2014Table II-11 Cassava yield in China, 2004~2009Table II-12 Economic benefit comparison of alcohol production using different raw materials in China Table II-13 Soybean planting area in different provinces in China, 2009Table II-14 Soybean yield in China, 2004~2009Table II-15 Supply & demand situation of soybean in China, 2004~2009 (million tonnes)Table II-16 Forecast on soybean situation in China, 2010~2014Table II-17 Output of corn and corn cob in China, 2004~2009Table II-18 Output of corn and corn stover in China, 2004~2009Table II-19 Output of wheat/rice and wheat/rice straw in China, 2004~2009Table II-20 Planting area and distribution of Jatropha curcas in China, 2009Table III-1 Resource of biofuels in ChinaTable III-2 Comparison among biofuels of different generationTable III-3 Current and future situation of each biofuel in China, 2009Table III-4 Comparison of different raw materials for fuel ethanol production in ChinaTable III-5 Basic information of main fuel ethanol manufacturers in China, 2009 Table III-6 Potential fuel ethanol manufacturers in China, 2009Table III-7 Comparison of different raw material for biodiesel production in ChinaTable III-8 Basic information of biodiesel manufacturers in China, June 2009Table III-9 Basic information of main potential biodiesel manufacturers in China, 2009Table III-10 Comparison between fuel ethanol and biobutanolTable III-11 Basic information of main biobutanol manufacturers in China, 2009Table III-12 Comparison between biofuels of the first and second generationTable III-13 Advantages and disadvantages of second-generation biofuelsTable III-14 Main manufacturers engaged in second generation biofuels in ChinaTable III-15 Main research institutes engaged in second generation biofuels in ChinaTable III-16 Advantages and disadvantages of third-generation biofuelTable III-17 Main research institutes engaged in third-generation biofuels in ChinaTable IV-1 Comparison among four kinds of biofuel technologies in ChinaTable IV-2 Enzymatic hydrolysis in production of different biofuelsTable IV-3 Main researchers on raw materials for biofuel in China, 2009Table IV-4 Main researchers on biofuel in China, 2009Table IV-5 New biofuel technologies likely to be industrialized in China, by 2009 Table V-1 Main regulations released on biofuel industry in ChinaTable V-2 Discharge standard of two important indicators for biofuel industry in China, Unit: mg/LTable VI-1 Competitiveness analysis of China’s biofuel industry, 2009Table VI-2 Comparison of the 3 state-owned ethanol producers in China, 2009
LIST OF FIGURES
Figure I-1 Consumption structure of fuel oil by type in China, 2008Figure II-1 Corn planting area in China, 2004~2009Figure II-2 Import and export of corn in China, 2004~2009Figure II-3 Consumption volume of corn by application filed in China, 2004~2009Figure II-4 Production chain of corn starch Figure II-5 Forecast on import and export of corn in China, 2010~2014Figure II-6 Forecast on corn consumption volume in China, 2010~2014Figure II-7 Wheat planting area in China, 2004~2009Figure II-8 Import and export of wheat in China, 2004~2009Figure II-9 Consumption volume of wheat by application field in China, 2004~2009Figure II-10 Forecast on wheat consumption by application field in China, 2010~2014Figure II-11 Cassava planting area in China, 2004~2009Figure II-12 Supply, import and export of cassava in China, 2004~2009Figure II-13 Price trend of cassava in China, 2004~2009 (dry cassava)Figure II-14 Consumption structure of cassava by application field in China, 2008Figure II-15 Applications of cassava alcoholFigure II-16 Planting area of sorghum in China, 2004~2008Figure II-17 Soybean planting area in China, 2004~2009Figure II-18 Price trend of soybean in China, 2004~2009Figure II-19 Import and export of soybean in China, 2004~2009Figure II-20 Consumption volume of soybean by application field in China, 2004~2009Figure II-21 Consumption volume of soybean oil by application in China, 2004~2009Figure II-22 Forecast on consumption of soybean oil in China, 2010~2014Figure II-23 Corn cob price in some major production provinces in China, 2004~2008 Figure II-24 Consumption structure of corn cobs by application in China in 2008Figure II-25 Consumption structure of corn stover in China, 2008Figure III-1 Evolution of four generations biofuels in the worldFigure III-2 Output of fuel ethanol in China, 2003-2009estFigure III-3 Fuel ethanol capacity structure of different raw materials in China, 2009Figure III-5 Forecast on capacity of fuel ethanol in China, 2009-2014Figure III-6 Biodiesel capacity structure of different raw materials in China, 2009Figure III-7 Forecast on capacity of biodiesel in China, 2009-2014Figure III-8 Forecast on capacity of second-generation fuel ethanol in China to 2014Figure IV-1 Flowchart of fuel ethanol production technology in ChinaFigure VII-1 Forecast on first and second generation fuel ethanol capacity to 2014 in China
Part of Report: click here for sample pages
China has been faced with shortage of fossil fuel for a long time and it has been importing a large quantity of petroleum every year, for example, net importing XXX million tonnes, namely, XXX of its total consumption in 2008. This has underlined the urgency for China to develop substitutes for fossil fuel. On the other hand, its abundant resources have made it possible for this nation to develop biofuel products, the ideal alternative of fossil fuel.
China has released a series of policies to promote biofuel industry development in recent years. The National Development and Reform Commission of China made a three-stage plan for the development of biofuels industry: â‘ Technology industrialization in the 11th five years; â‘¡Industrial scale in the 12th five years; â‘¢Great development after 2015.
In 2007, according to Zhu Zhigang, vice director of Ministry of Finance People’s Republic of China, bio-energy will take up XXX of China’s oil consumption by 2020; China’s biofuels capacity will reach XXX million tonnes in 2020, including XXX million tonnes of fuel ethanol and XXX million tonnes of biodiesel.
China’s biofuel industry has made great achievement in recent years, though still at growth stage. Among all the biofuel products, fuel ethanol has developed best in China with strong support from the government. In 2008, among China’s total oil fuel consumption, about XXX million tonnes; biodiesel constituted XXX million tonnes, that is, XXX of all the oil fuel and fuel ethanol XXX million tonnes, equaling XXX.
Both biodiesel and fuel ethanol takes up less than XXX of the total oil fuel consumption, suggesting their huge development potential.
Now, most biofuel products in China are only the first generation ones. Technology adopting food feedstock to produce biofuels has become mature. In 2008, there were XXX manufacturers producing XXX tonnes of fuel ethanol and XX manufacturers producing XXX tonnes of biodiesel through first-generation technology. In 2009, there are XXX manufacturers trying to produce biofuel through second-generation technology.
In recent years, more and more feedstock, mainly including food feedstock, non-food feedstock, oilseed, cellulosic raw material, energy crop and waste oil, is used to produce fuel ethanol, as biofuels are becoming increasingly hot.
At present, food feedstock is the major raw material of biofuel, including corn and wheat used to produce fuel ethanol. Corn has been the most popular raw material to produce fuel ethanol. But Chinese government has enacted regulations to restrict the use of corn in fuel ethanol production, because corn supply as food and feed source in China has been very tight with China’s large population and little corn has been imported into China for concerns of potential ecological danger from overseas GM corn.
Cassava as non-food feedstock will be the major raw material of biofuel. Biofuel from cassava has advantage of lower production cost. In the south of China, the large area of wasteland will be ideal for potential cassava planting, which will provide a large quantity of feedstock for biofuel industry. At present, some domestic fuel giants have invested or will invest in large-scale cassava planting and in factories in Guangxi, Yunnan, Hainan to produce fuel ethanol.
Corn cob and stover, wheat/rice straw are cellulosic materials for biofuel if China’s technology of second-generation biofuel matures. Their output in China is huge.
Researches on biofuels are hot in China at present. Research on technology of biofuel in China focuses on enzymatic hydrolysis, fermentation, transesterification and pyrolysisi & gasification. At present, China's biomass liquid fuel industry is lagging behind in technology, with the following disadvantages:
 Low utilization efficiency of raw materials, high raw material consumption;
 High production cost and high energy consumption;
 Lack of complete production technology and matched equipment for Chinese non-food plants (cornstalks, rice straw, small polycarpa etc.).
However, China's biofuel technology will be solved in the future. Researches on technology for the second generation of biomass liquid fuel (main raw materials are agricultural and forestry residues) has become the hotspot in China's universities and research institutions.
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