The Economic Viability of Jatropha Biodiesel in Nepal

Nepal depends entirely on imports for meeting its demand for petroleum products, which account for the largest share in total import volume. Diesel is the main petroleum product consumed in the country and accounts for 38 percent of the total national CO2 emissions from fuel consumption. There is a general perception that the country would economically benefit if part of imported diesel is substituted with domestically produced jatropha-based biodiesel. This study finds that the economics of jatropha-based biodiesel depend on several factors, such as diesel price, yield of jatropha seeds per hectare, and availability of markets for production byproducts, such as glycerol and jatropha cake. Under the scenarios considered, jatropha biodiesel is unlikely to be economically competitive in Nepal unless seed yields per hectare are implausibly large and high returns can be obtained from byproduct markets that do not yet exist. In the absence of byproduct markets, even earnings from a carbon credit do not help jatropha biodiesel to compete with diesel unless the credit value exceeds US$50/tCO2 (which is well above current values) and jatropha seed yield is at or above the midrange of the scenarios considered. Declines in diesel prices from the levels observed in 2009–13 only compound the economic competitiveness issue.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Timilsina, Govinda R., Tiwari, Ujjal
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2015-06
Subjects:CARBON CREDIT, EMPLOYMENT, OIL EXTRACTION, COLLECTION COSTS, TRANSPORT SECTOR, FUEL PROPERTIES, PRODUCTION, CARBON DIOXIDE, FOSSIL FUELS, VARIABLE COSTS, CALCULATION, UREA, CARBON, VEHICLES, OIL SEED PLANT, ACTIVITIES, DISCOUNT RATE, EMISSIONS, GASOLINE, WELFARE, EMISSION REDUCTION, VARIABLES, GAS, WHOLESALE PRICE, DIESEL CONSUMPTION, PRICE, INPUTS, OIL PRODUCTION, PAYMENTS, GREENHOUSE GAS, PESTICIDES, ECONOMIC ANALYSIS, TRENDS, CENTRAL BANK, AGRICULTURAL PRACTICES, DEVELOPMENT, MAIZE, CAPACITY UTILIZATION, WATER MANAGEMENT, CO2, PETROLEUM, OIL PRICES, CLIMATIC CONDITIONS, PER CAPITA INCOME, COSTS, OIL, SUSTAINABLE ENERGY, CHEMICAL PROPERTIES, RENT, BIODIESEL, CAPACITY, PLANT OWNER, GHG, CALORIFIC VALUE, FIXED COSTS, WATER, DISTRIBUTION FACILITIES, MARKETS, RAINFALL, VARIABLE INPUTS, ALTERNATIVE FUELS, PHOSPHORUS, TOTAL COSTS, ENERGY SECTOR, PETROLEUM CONSUMPTION, DISCOUNTED VALUE, FUEL CONSUMPTION, FUELS, SUBSIDIES, DEGRADED LAND, TAXES, ALTERNATIVE USE, TURBINE, ENERGY CONSUMPTION, EMISSION, GREENHOUSE, CONSUMPTION, OPPORTUNITY COST, GROSS MARGIN, ECONOMIC RENT, HEAT, CROP, CLIMATE CHANGE, FUEL TYPES, CARBON REVENUE, DROUGHT, BALANCE, CARBON CREDITS, BIO-ENERGY, ALTERNATIVE ENERGY, HEAT RATE, VALUE, COMPETITIVENESS, CLEAN DEVELOPMENT, ELECTRICITY, CREDIT, COST OF FEEDSTOCK, FORESTS, FOSSIL FUEL, CHEMICAL INDUSTRIES, AGRICULTURE, PETROLEUM GAS, DAP, ECONOMIC COMPETITIVENESS, ECONOMICS, PILOT PROJECTS, TRADE, EMISSIONS FROM FUEL, BIOFUEL, COMBUSTION, FEEDSTOCK, INVESTMENT, NITROGEN, RURAL AREAS, COAL, FUEL, CARBON MARKET, POTASH, LESS, AVAILABILITY, FACILITIES, WHEAT, ECONOMIC LIFE, BIOFUELS, LIQUEFIED PETROLEUM GAS, RENEWABLE ENERGY, PETROLEUM PRODUCTS, ECONOMICS RESEARCH, DIESEL, KEROSENE, PRICE FLOOR, FOSSIL, PRICES, JATROPHA, PRODUCTION COSTS, OIL SEED, BENEFITS, DEVELOPMENT POLICY, ALTERNATIVE FUEL, ENERGY,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/06/24597230/economic-viability-jatropha-biodiesel-nepal
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/22168
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!