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Portuguese bioenergy start-up Futerra Torrefaçao e Tecnologia S.A. (Futerra Fuels) has started the construction of their first commercial scale torrefied pellet production plant in Valongo, Portugal. The technology for this plant was developed by the Dutch company Yilkins.
Editorial office / Portugal

The plant will have an annual production capacity of 120 ktons of torrefied pellets and 55 ktons of regular industrial wood pellets per year.

According to Henk Hutting, chairman and co-founder of Futerra Fuels, torrefaction will play a critical role in the future of biomass for energy generation. ‘Torrefied pellets have a cleaner combustion then regular pellets and can be made from a much broader variety of biomass feed stocks, like grasses and agricultural residues. With torrefaction we can create a new generation of biomass fuel that can be produced in a sustainable manner while simultaneously competing on an economically viable basis.’

Promising technology

The torrefied pellets will be delivered to power plants and industrial users in Europe by long term supply contracts. Approximately 40 ktons of white wood pellets have been contracted for sale to CM Biomass in Copenhagen. Michael Christensen, CEO of CM Biomass says: ‘Torrefaction is a promising technology that can significantly impact the transportation costs for wood pellet supply chains. Our current focus is on white pellets but through this partnership CM Biomass can closely monitor these new developments.’

The higher calorific value of torrefied pellets – 21 GJ/ton or even greater – and higher bulk density results in relatively less CO2 emissions during transport and creates significant cost savings during transport and storage.

Rollout

The plant in Valongo will be the first project of Futerra Fuels and will be the first commercial scale torrefaction plant in Portugal. The total investment is € 38 Million, which is financed by the founders with BPI Bank and the Portugal 2020 Program.

The successful commercialization of this new technology, designed and supplied by Yilkins of Groningen, The Netherlands, is a precursor to Futerra Fuels’ rollout of new production plants, initially in Europe and The Americas. The founding of Futerra Fuels in 2015 represented several years of R&D by Dutch, American and Portuguese investors with backgrounds in project finance, wind farm development and operation, energy trading and the circular economy.