Assessing impacts of deploying bio-based isobutene for MTBE production in an existing petrochemical cluster
More Info
expand_more
Abstract
Alternative carbon sources (ACS) are increasingly considered necessary for the defossilisation of fossil-based chemicals. However, the potential and impacts of integrating ACS-based processes in existing petrochemical clusters are often overlooked. This paper aims to systematically analyse key techno-economic and environmental indicators associated with producing bio-based isobutene as an option to defossilise the production of methyl-tert-butyl-ether (MTBE) in the Port of Rotterdam, the Netherlands. The assessment is conducted at process and cluster levels. For this, the bio-isobutene (bio-IBN) process (358 kt/y of product), along with the existing fossil-based processes involved in MTBE production (i.e. the MTBE cluster), were modelled in Aspen Plus v12. The results show that under current conditions, although bio-IBN production could defossilise the MTBE cluster by c.a. 80 %, it is not cost-competitive compared to the current fossil-based process. Furthermore, deploying the bio-IBN process would significantly change the structure of the existing MTBE cluster, increasing by a factor of two or larger electricity, cooling water and bare land requirements. These requirements would affect the economic and environmental performance of the full cluster. The results emphasise the critical role of strategic change of new processes within existing petrochemical clusters.