Abstract
The growing demand for renewable energy positions biorefineries as key to enhancing biofuel competitiveness. This study proposes a novel MILP superstructure integrating resource seasonality, process selection, and heat integration to optimize biomethanol production in a sugarcane biorefinery. A multi-objective optimization balancing net present value (NPV) and avoided CO(2) emissions reveals that energy integration improves environmental performance with limited economic impact. The model estimates the production of up to 66.85 kg of biomethanol/ton sugarcane from bagasse gasification, 40.7 kg e-methanol/ton sugarcane via CO(2) hydrogenation, and 3.68 kg of biomethane/ton sugarcane from biogas upgrading. Hydrogen production through biomethane reforming and photovoltaic-powered electrolysis increases methanol output without raising emissions. The integrated system achieves energy efficiencies of up to 57.3% and enables the avoidance of up to 493 kg of CO(2)/ton sugarcane over the planning horizon. When thermal integration is excluded, efficiency drops by 8% and net energy production per area falls by 11%, due to the need to divert bagasse to cogeneration. Although economic challenges remain, CO(2) remuneration ranging from USD 3.27 to USD 129.79 per ton could ensure project viability. These findings highlight the role of integrated energy systems in enabling sustainable and economically feasible sugarcane biorefineries.