Decarbonization pathways for liquid fuels: A multi-sector energy system perspective
Jun Wen Law, Bryan K. Mignone, Dharik S. Mallapragada

TL;DR
This study uses a multi-sector capacity expansion model to analyze how biofuels, synthetic fuels, and fossil fuels contribute to decarbonizing the US energy system, highlighting the importance of resource constraints.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of fuel production pathways under various resource and demand scenarios in a decarbonized energy system.
Findings
Biofuels consistently supply a substantial share of liquid fuels.
Synthetic fuels are used mainly when biomass or sequestration is limited.
Fossil fuels persist due to offsetting emissions with removals.
Abstract
Low-carbon liquid fuels play a key role in energy system decarbonization scenarios. This study uses a multi-sector capacity expansion model of the contiguous United States to examine fuels production in deeply decarbonized energy systems. Our analysis evaluates how the shares of biofuels, synthetic fuels, and fossil liquid fuels change under varying assumptions about resource constraints (biomass and CO2 sequestration availability), fuel demand distributions, and supply flexibility to produce different fuel products. Across all scenarios examined, biofuels provide a substantial share of liquid fuel supply, while synthetic fuels deploy only when biomass or CO2 sequestration is assumed to be more limited. Fossil liquid fuels remain in all scenarios examined, primarily driven by the extent to which their emissions can be offset with removals. Limiting biomass increases biogenic CO2 capture…
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