Data from Economic Perspective of Ethanol and Biodiesel Coproduction from Industrial Hemp
Dataset Description |
In this study, the economics of producing biofuels from an industrial hemp (Cannabis sativa) genotype – 19m96136 was investigated. A lignocellulosic biofuel plant, hourly consuming 85 metric tons of hemp biomass was modeled in SuperPro Designer®. The integrated bioenergy plant produced hemp biodiesel and bioethanol from lipids and carbohydrates, respectively. The structural composition of the industrial hemp plant was analyzed in a previous study. The data obtained was used to simulate feedstock composition in SuperPro Designer®. The simulation results indicated that Hemp containing 2% lipids can yield up to 3.95 million gallons of biodiesel annually. On improving biomass lipid content to 5 and 10%, biodiesel production increased to 9.88 and 19.91 million gallons, respectively. The breakeven unit production cost of hemp biodiesel with 2, 5, and 10% lipid containing hemp was $18.49, $7.87, and $4.13/gallon, respectively. The biodiesel unit production cost when utilizing 10% lipid-containing hemp was comparable to soybean biodiesel at $4.13/gallon. Furthermore, sensitivity analysis revealed the possibility of a 7.80% reduction in unit production cost upon a 10% reduction in hemp feedstock cost. Furthermore, industrial hemp was capable of producing between 307.80 and 325.82 gallons of total biofuels per hectare of agricultural land than soybean. |
Subject |
Life Sciences |
Keywords |
Conversion;Feedstock Production;Economics;Modeling |
License |
CC BY |
Funder |
U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)-Grant:DE-SC0018420 |
Corresponding Creator |
Vijay Singh |
Downloaded |
68 times |
| Version | DOI | Comment | Publication Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 10.13012/B2IDB-1141487_V1 | 2025-09-30 |
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