Abstract
Integrating forest biomass into bioenergy systems poses logistical challenges due to seasonal variations in quality and the dispersed nature of supply. We develop a mixed-integer linear programming model that jointly optimizes procurement timing, multimodal transport (truck−rail−barge), chipping and drying locations, and inventory levels at supply nodes, terminals, and the biorefinery. The model embeds process-state transitions, seasonal moisture profiles, and infrastructure limits. In a large-scale Quebec case study (500 − 3000 dry metric tonne (DMT)/day), integrating rail reduces total system costs by 2.8 − 4.8% and yields mill-gate costs around CAD 119 − 121 per DMT. Terminals near the biorefinery decouple procurement from conversion and support buffer-based strategies through high-moisture periods. The optimization model is computationally tractable and provides a reusable template for planning forest biomass logistics that accounts for seasonal quality, preprocessing, and mode-choice interactions.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Journal | International Journal of Forest Engineering |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | In press - 2026 |
!!!Keywords
- Bioenergy logistics
- mixed-integer programming model
- rail and barge integration
- seasonal moisture dynamics
- storage and buffering strategies
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