Cofiring biomass with coal: Opportunities for Malaysia
Malaysia generated 108,175 GWh of electricity in 2010 where 39.51 % was sourced from coal. Coal power generation is also planned to overtake natural gas as the main fuel for electricity generation within the next two decades. Malaysia also has a vast biomass resource that is currently under-utilised...
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my.uniten.dspace-301372024-04-18T10:38:24Z Cofiring biomass with coal: Opportunities for Malaysia Rahman A.A. Shamsuddin A.H. 36994910600 35779071900 agricultural residues cofiring Malaysia coal power stations Malaysia Agricultural wastes Biomass Carbon dioxide Electric generators Electric power generation Global warming Power plants Biomass resources Carbon dioxide emissions Co-firing Co-firing biomass Coal power stations Electricity generation Potential sources Renewable energies biomass power carbon dioxide carbon emission coal coal-fired power plant conference proceeding crop residue electricity generation energy resource integrated approach renewable resource stakeholder Coal Malaysia generated 108,175 GWh of electricity in 2010 where 39.51 % was sourced from coal. Coal power generation is also planned to overtake natural gas as the main fuel for electricity generation within the next two decades. Malaysia also has a vast biomass resource that is currently under-utilised for electricity generation. This paper studies the option of cofiring biomass in existing Malaysian coal power plants to increase the nation's renewable energy mix as well as to reduce its power sector carbon dioxide emission. Benefits of cofiring to the nation were discussed and agricultural residues from palm oil and paddy was identified as a potential source of biomass for cofiring. It was also found that there is a willingness for cofiring by stakeholders but barriers existed in the form of technical issues and lack of clear direction and mechanism. � Published under licence by IOP Publishing Ltd. Final 2023-12-29T07:44:51Z 2023-12-29T07:44:51Z 2013 Conference Paper 10.1088/1755-1315/16/1/012144 2-s2.0-84881108513 https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84881108513&doi=10.1088%2f1755-1315%2f16%2f1%2f012144&partnerID=40&md5=919236bdcf995b74f1979a8c6e1aaa53 https://irepository.uniten.edu.my/handle/123456789/30137 16 1 12144 All Open Access; Bronze Open Access Institute of Physics Publishing Scopus |
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agricultural residues cofiring Malaysia coal power stations Malaysia Agricultural wastes Biomass Carbon dioxide Electric generators Electric power generation Global warming Power plants Biomass resources Carbon dioxide emissions Co-firing Co-firing biomass Coal power stations Electricity generation Potential sources Renewable energies biomass power carbon dioxide carbon emission coal coal-fired power plant conference proceeding crop residue electricity generation energy resource integrated approach renewable resource stakeholder Coal |
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agricultural residues cofiring Malaysia coal power stations Malaysia Agricultural wastes Biomass Carbon dioxide Electric generators Electric power generation Global warming Power plants Biomass resources Carbon dioxide emissions Co-firing Co-firing biomass Coal power stations Electricity generation Potential sources Renewable energies biomass power carbon dioxide carbon emission coal coal-fired power plant conference proceeding crop residue electricity generation energy resource integrated approach renewable resource stakeholder Coal Rahman A.A. Shamsuddin A.H. Cofiring biomass with coal: Opportunities for Malaysia |
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Malaysia generated 108,175 GWh of electricity in 2010 where 39.51 % was sourced from coal. Coal power generation is also planned to overtake natural gas as the main fuel for electricity generation within the next two decades. Malaysia also has a vast biomass resource that is currently under-utilised for electricity generation. This paper studies the option of cofiring biomass in existing Malaysian coal power plants to increase the nation's renewable energy mix as well as to reduce its power sector carbon dioxide emission. Benefits of cofiring to the nation were discussed and agricultural residues from palm oil and paddy was identified as a potential source of biomass for cofiring. It was also found that there is a willingness for cofiring by stakeholders but barriers existed in the form of technical issues and lack of clear direction and mechanism. � Published under licence by IOP Publishing Ltd. |
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36994910600 |
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36994910600 Rahman A.A. Shamsuddin A.H. |
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Conference Paper |
author |
Rahman A.A. Shamsuddin A.H. |
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Rahman A.A. |
title |
Cofiring biomass with coal: Opportunities for Malaysia |
title_short |
Cofiring biomass with coal: Opportunities for Malaysia |
title_full |
Cofiring biomass with coal: Opportunities for Malaysia |
title_fullStr |
Cofiring biomass with coal: Opportunities for Malaysia |
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Cofiring biomass with coal: Opportunities for Malaysia |
title_sort |
cofiring biomass with coal: opportunities for malaysia |
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Institute of Physics Publishing |
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2023 |
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1806427769652903936 |
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13.214268 |