Abstract
Advanced biofuels are a promising option to achieve ambitious climate change mitigation goals while fostering a circular bioeconomy. Norway aims to expand the production of advanced biofuels from lignocellulosic biomass through novel technologies, but the climate change mitigation benefits and techno-economic performance remain unclear. This study performs an environmental and techno-economic analysis of biofuels from alternative forest-based feedstock using a cost-optimization and spatially explicit econometric model, different emerging conversion technologies, plant production sizes, and priorities for fuel upgrading (aviation, shipping, or trucks). Our results show that a higher number of plants distributed in the country has around 50 % lower emissions for feedstock transport than a single large-scale plant, which instead is more profitable than multiple smaller-scale plants. The investigated technologies achieve 69–94 % lower GHG intensities than fossil fuels, with the highest savings when hydrogen for upgrading is internally produced. The expected future availability of green hydrogen reduces the difference among technologies. When considering GHG emissions only, all biofuel options show similar savings. However, the inclusion of non-GHG contributions reveals the highest mitigation for shipping, followed by road-freight transport and aviation. Processing 1 Mm3 of feedstock annually can reduce impacts up to 0.55 MtCO2-eq./yr by 2050. Prioritizing bio-based jet fuel can mitigate 15 % of current Norwegian aviation emissions, while bio-based diesel can reduce emissions by 10 % in shipping or 3 % for road diesel. While the minimum selling price of biofuels is higher than fossil fuels, biofuels offer a lower cost of abatement compared to alternatives like batteries, green hydrogen, and e-fuels.