7d. Report

P-00318568
Aviation Biofuels Infrastructure
Feasibility Study
Final Report
November 2016







Prepared for:


Prepared by:


TABLE OF CONTENTS
Executive Summary              v
Background                    1
1.1     Terms Used in This Report                                              2
1.2     Study Process                                                          2
Site Identification                    3
2.1     Screening the Initial Sites                                               4
Site Evaluation                     9
3.1     Site Evaluation Criteria                                                10
3.2     Site Evaluation Results                                                10
Conceptual Infrastructure 
Needs, Design and 
Cost Estimation                 13
4.1      Near-Term/Small Volume Supply Transitioning to 
Long-Term/Large Volume Supply                                  14

Aviation Biofuels Infrastructure Feasibility Study                                     iii

4.2     Site Options: Infrastructure Needs and Conceptual Designs           15
4.3     Engineer's Estimate of Probable Cost for All Sites and Options         25
4.4     Estimated Timelines for All Sites and Options                          26
Implementation Option 
Feasibility Evaluation             33
5.1     Criteria Scorecard Categories and Scoring                             34
5.2     Short-Term and Long-Term Options                                   34
5.3     Criteria Category 1: Multi-Modal Delivery Point Access 
(Long-Term Only)                                                  34
5.4     Criteria Category 2: Environmental Constraints                        35
5.5     Criteria Category 3: Permitting and Planning                           35
5.6     Criteria Category 4: Site Development and Costs                      36
5.7     Criteria Category 5: Community Acceptance                           37
5.8     Criteria Category 6: Contingency and Other                            37
5.9      Criteria Scorecard Weightings                                          38
5.10    Criteria Scorecard Results                                          41
Key Findings                    47



iv                                     Aviation Biofuels Infrastructure Feasibility Study

Executive Summary
Seattle-Tacoma International (Sea-Tac) Airport is an industry leader
in reducing aircraft-related emissions. The Port of Seattle, Alaska
Airlines, and the Boeing Company have set a goal to power every
flight fueled at Sea-Tac with sustainable aviation biofuel, which
have a lifecycle carbon footprint typically 50 to 80 percent lower
than regular jet fuel. Because these biofuels are not produced
yet in Washington State, they must be imported by truck, rail, or
barge and then be blended with regular petroleum-based jet fuel.
Sea-Tac Airport aims to become one of the first airports in the world
to offer a reliable supply of aviation biofuels to its passenger and
cargo airlines.
The objective of this feasibility study is to identify sites that could
support the receipt, blending, storage, and delivery infrastructure
required to supply Sea-Tac Airport with up to 50 million gallons per
year (and to double to 100 million after 2025) of aviation biofuel (also
known as sustainable alternative aviation fuel).
Study Objective and Approach

Study Approach                      A small biofuel receiving and blending facility at
the Sea-Tac Airport Fuel Farm is the most cost-
A multi-phase screening process consisting of               effective solution in the short term and would
the following steps was used to create and refine            also fulfill an existing critical need for additional
down a list of potential aviation biofuel sites:                  local fuel receipt and storage capacity that is
not dependent on the Olympic Pipeline.
Identify appropriate properties in the Puget
Sound region that would allow for the receipt,            Tesoro Anacortes was used as a proxy for any
storage, blending, and integration of aviation              of the three refineries that currently produce
biofuels into the Sea-Tac Airport fueling system           Jet-A fuel in Whatcom and Skagit Counties.
These refineries are the most cost-effective
Screen to eliminate those candidate properties
options for receipt and blending of large
that are least likely to meet the project goals
volumes of aviation biofuel over the long term.
Evaluate a short list of six properties to identify
The Phillips 66/Olympic Pipeline Company
existing infrastructure connections, current
site in Renton also showed potential to
and future capacity requirements, and property
accommodate receipt and blending facilities
ownership and zoning
for moderate-to-large biofuel volumes over the
Develop detailed short-term and long-term                  long term.
infrastructure requirements and associated cost
Focus should be given short-term investments
estimates for the most feasible properties
on smaller scale facilities that are flexible and
Complete a comprehensive feasibility                       could support other aviation fuel supply uses
evaluation and scorecard for the most feasible            due to the lack of long-term supply source for
properties and near- and long-term options               aviation biofuels. Identifying a biofuel supply
source was not a part of this study.
Key Findings                          Facilities that rely on offloading fuel via rail and
marine modes are only cost-effective for large
The key findings of the study are the following:           volumes of biofuel over the long term due to
high infrastructure costs.
The following three sites (and six options) were
identified as the most likely to meet the project           The Olympic Pipeline Company and the
goals:                                                    petroleum refineries and distributors have
showed strong interest in upgrading their
1.  Sea-Tac Airport Fuel Farm
facilities to handle aviation biofuel and moving
1A. Sea-Tac Airport Fuel Farm Small Volume          the blended product in their pipelines.
Existing Roadway
As the biofuel supply expands, the Port of
1B. Sea-Tac Airport Fuel Farm Small Volume
Seattle, its partners, and the fuel supply
SR 509 Connector 
and transport organizations could work
(Future Infrastructure)
cooperatively toward the ultimate goal of
2.  Phillips 66/Olympic Pipeline Renton                    integrating aviation biofuel into the fuel hydrant
Terminal                                         delivery system at Sea-Tac Airport.
2A. Renton Terminal Small Volume 
Receive Offsite-Blended Aviation Biofuel
via Truck
2B. Renton Terminal  Receive Neat Biofuel
via Truck and Jet-A via Pipeline, On-site
Blending
2C. Renton Terminal  Receive Neat Biofuel
via Rail and Jet-A via Pipeline, On-site
Blending
3.  Tesoro Anacortes Refinery


vi                                     Aviation Biofuels Infrastructure Feasibility Study

1 Background
The Port of Seattle, Alaska Airlines, and the Boeing Company embarked
on a feasibility study to identify the best approach to deliver aviation
biofuel to the Seattle-Tacoma (Sea-Tac) International Airport aircraft
hydrant fueling system. In pursuing an integrated aviation biofuels
supply chain, Sea-Tac aims to become one of the first airports in the
world to offer a reliable supply of aviation biofuels to its passenger and
cargo airlines.
The objective of the study is to identify sites that could support the
receipt, blending, storage, and delivery infrastructure required to supply
Sea-Tac with up to 50 million gallons per year of sustainable alternative
aviation fuel (also referred to as aviation biofuel).
Potential sites were evaluated both for the ability to accommodate
near-term (12 to 18 months) supplies of 5 million gallons per year of
biofuel, and long-term (2 to 10 years) supplies of 50+ million gallons
per year. Sites were selected based on the capacity to accommodate
delivery of unblended biofuel by pipe, rail, barge, and/or truck,
and were evaluated based on land use, zoning, and environmental
considerations. Site footprints were required to accommodate the
following parameters: biofuel infrastructure for offloading, storage,
blending with conventional Jet-A fuel, fuel testing, integration into the
pipeline, parking, and administrative functions. Finally, the most feasible
sites were screened based on the construction costs of the needed
infrastructure, environmental constraints, permitting and planning,
and other contingences to help determine an overall score and final
recommendation.
Note that an aviation biofuel production plant was not considered in
this feasibility study. However, once a long-term aviation biofuel source
is identified, it will be an important next step to determine its relative
proximity to the sites considered in this feasibility study. The closer the
source of the aviation biofuel to a biofuel blending and integration facility,
the lower the transportation and handling costs associated with the fuel.

1.1   Terms Used in This Report      1.2   Study Process
The following naming conventions and definitions         The following steps were completed for this
are used throughout this report:                           feasibility study:
Neat biofuel: 100% biofuel
Jet-A: Conventional petroleum Jet-A                  1 Identify appropriate properties in the Puget                            Sound region that would allow for the receipt,
storage, blending, and integration of aviation
Aviation biofuel: Blend of neat biofuel and                  biofuels into the Sea-Tac Airport fueling system
Jet-A (e.g., 20/80 blend)

Screen to eliminate those candidate properties
Neat Biofuel         Jet-A
20% + 80%          2 that are least likely to meet the project goals
3 Evaluate a short list of six properties to identify              existing infrastructure connections, current
and future capacity requirements, and property
ownership and zoning
4 Develop detailed short-term and long-term           infrastructure requirements and associated
Aviation                                 cost estimates for the most feasible properties
Biofuel
5 Complete a comprehensive feasibility          evaluation and scorecard for the most feasible
properties and near- and long-term options

This document describes each stage of the study
process in more detail, as well as the final results
of the study.







2                                  Aviation Biofuels Infrastructure Feasibility Study

2 Site Identification
An initial list of 29 potential sites was developed based on the
following criteria:
Site size: 2 acres or more
Site requirements: Load/offload rack, storage tanks, blending
system, testing facility, administration, and parking
Site use/zoning: Compatible with biofuel infrastructure
Modes of fuel transportation: pipeline, truck, rail, marine vessel
Proximity to: Sea-Tac Airport, Olympic Pipeline or one of its
delivery lines, and modes of transportation
When evaluating the proximity to the pipeline, it is important to
note that the directional flow of the Olympic Pipeline is north-tosouth.
Two parallel main pipelines originate at the Allen pump
station in Skagit County and continue south to a terminal/pump
station in Renton. The pipelines flow southward and carry gasoline,
diesel, and jet fuel in a scheduled rotation. The Allen pump station
receives the fuel products from refineries located in Whatcom
and Skagit Counties. One of the pipelines terminates at Renton
and serves the Seattle market with delivery lines (outbound) to
Sea-Tac Airport (currently carrying only petroleum Jet-A) and to
Harbor Island (carrying gasoline and diesel). The other main parallel
pipeline continues through the Renton pump station and carries all
three petroleum products as far south as Portland, Oregon. These
pipelines and delivery lines are shown in the maps at the end of this
section.
The detailed screening matrix for the 29 potential sites is available in
Full Report Task 2.

2.1   Screening the Initial Sites         Environmental constraints (wetlands,
floodplains, slopes, site contamination)
The screening criteria listed below were used
Existing zoning (i.e., is biofuel infrastructure a
as a framework to refine the initial list of 29
permitted or conditional use?)
potential sites down to six. To assist with the
evaluation, specific locations were identified for              Compatibility of adjacent uses (e.g., industrial)
each site (e.g., street addresses, parcels or map
Presence of existing structures on the site
coordinates) using the following tools: on-line
(particularly those requiring demolition)
county assessor files for King, Pierce, and Franklin
Counties; GIS data on floodplains, wetlands,                Parcels/assembly requirements
and slopes; Washington State Department of
Size
Ecology Confirmed & Suspected Contaminated
Sites List; aerial imagery; and jurisdictional zoning           Owners
regulations and zoning maps.
Other (e.g., security concerns, community
perceptions, other notable facts)
The project team applied the potential site criteria
described above to develop the list of the top six
The complete screening results are available in
recommended sites. The analysis was completed
the Full Report Task 2. The results, as well as the
for the following screening criteria:
rationale for the screening outcome for each site,
Proximity to Olympic Pipeline or Harbor Island           are summarized in Table 1. Non-industrial zoning,
delivery line                                                 the existence of wetlands, and the absence of all
fuel transportation modes were important factors
Proximity to Sea-Tac Airport delivery line
in a negative screening outcome.
(directly serves Sea-Tac Airport)
Accessibility via multiple transportation modes
(pipe, rail, barge, truck)

Table 1: Screening Results
Site                                         Screening Outcome
Yes      Port-owned; direct delivery to aircraft after blending.
1  Sea-Tac International Airport Fuel Farm
(Site A)     Could be considered in combination with other options.
Combine two parcels into one site for consideration.
2  Olympic Pipeline Renton Terminal                  Room for expansion exists at Phillips 66, and the Olympic
Pipeline terminal parcel provides direct connection to
Yes 
Sea-Tac Airport delivery pipeline. Could be considered
(Site B)
in combination with other options. Rail spur (0.8 mile)
3  Phillips 66 Renton Tank Farm                      to this site would impact wetlands. West side of these
parcels is wetlands.
Under construction with three-story office park. Other
4  1300 SW 27th Street, Renton              No
options exist.
Combine parcels to create a property that is long enough
5  Boeing Renton Longacres (south)
Yes      to support rail sidings (additional property and/or
(Site C)     easements may be needed). Re-zoning would be required
6  Boeing Renton Longacres (north)                   to allow industrial use.


4                                  Aviation Biofuels Infrastructure Feasibility Study

Table 1: Screening Results (Cont'd)
Site                                         Screening Outcome
Not adjacent to rail line. Direct connection to Sea-Tac
7  Additional Potential Renton Site A           No      delivery pipeline would require infrastructure crossing
other parcels.
8  Additional Potential Renton Site B           No      Owned by City of Renton; primarily wetlands.
9  Additional Potential Renton Site C           No      Owned by City of Renton; primarily wetlands.
Current use is warehouse/light industrial. Remaining
10  Additional Potential Renton Site D           No
undeveloped portion of parcel (north side) is wetlands.
Current use is warehouse/light industrial. Remaining
11  Additional Potential Renton Site E           No
undeveloped portion of parcel (north side) is wetlands.
12  Additional Potential Renton Site F           No      Owned by City of Renton; primarily wetlands.
Combination of portions of several parcels, including
13  Additional Potential Renton Site G           No
some owned by City of Renton. Primarily wetlands.
Yes      Vacant; adjacent to Union Pacific and BNSF Railway
14  Tukwila Longacres
(Site D)    mainlines.
15  Tukwila Industrial Park                   No      Zoning does not support industrial use.
Harbor Island  Equiva Tank Farm 
16                                       Yes 
Shell                                                   One of these three sites (and/or adjacent property) could
(Site F)
be considered. Port-controlled; existing infrastructure.
17  Harbor Island  BP Tank Farm            Marine
Could be considered in combination with other options.
Option
18  Harbor Island  Kinder Morgan
19  Port of Tacoma  US Oil
20  Port of Tacoma  Targa Sound Terminal
Recommendation for marine access option is Harbor
21  Port of Tacoma  Phillips 66 Terminal        No
Island (Port of Seattle).
Port of Tacoma  former Kaiser
22
Aluminum plant
No marine access; limited land is available; no direct
23  Olympic Pipeline Bayview/Allen Terminal      No
access to rail.
24  BP Cherry Point Refinery                 Yes
(Site E)     One of these three sites in Whatcom/Skagit Counties
25  Tesoro Anacortes Refinery
North-end   could be considered.
26  Shell Puget Sound refinery              Refinery
27  Phillips 66 Refinery                      No      Does not currently handle jet fuel.
Existing biofuel producer/refinery. Possible very long-
28  REG Grays Harbor Refinery                No
term opportunity.
Possible very long-term opportunity if associated with
29  Pasco Tidewater Terminal                 No
large producer of biofuel in eastern Washington.


Aviation Biofuels Infrastructure Feasibility Study                                     5

As described above, the six properties that were          Originally, two sites for a marine access location
recommended to be carried forward into site             were considered for the sixth option: Harbor
evaluation are as follows:                                  Island and the Port of Tacoma. For the selection
of a marine access option, the location at a
B. Sea-Tac International Airport Fuel Farm 
Harbor Island terminal was deemed preferable to
(Site 1)
the Port of Tacoma alternatives due to the Port of
C. Phillips 66/Olympic Pipeline Renton                Seattle's greater influence over and ownership of
Terminal (Sites 2 and 3 combined)                    Harbor Island.
D. Boeing Renton Longacres (Sites 5 and 6
Additionally, sites located to the south of Seacombined
)
Tac Airport are downstream of the Olympic
E. Tukwila Longacres* (Site 14)                         Pipeline. Harbor Island is a good potential aviation
biofuel site with existing infrastructure and close
F.  North-end Refinery, which could ultimately
proximity to the pipeline. The Harbor Island site
be selected from one of the following:
also has the potential to add fuel supply resilience
--- BP Cherry Point Refinery (Whatcom               and provide a contingency supply if pipeline
County) (Site 24)                                    operations were disrupted north of Seattle.
--- Tesoro Anacortes Refinery (Skagit County)
(Site 25)
--- Shell Puget Sound Refinery (Anacortes,
Skagit County) (Site 26)
G. Harbor Island Marine Option, which could
ultimately be selected from one of the
following and/or nearby properties:
--- Equiva/Shell Tank Farm (Site 16)
--- BP Tank Farm (Site 17)
--- Kinder Morgan (Site 18)

* This site was added as an alternative to the 
Boeing Renton Longacres site









6                                  Aviation Biofuels Infrastructure Feasibility Study

o
DRAFT Date: 8/26/2016    0 2                                                                                                                                                                          U S A
4                                      site (28) in Grey's Harbor  Additional potential                                                                                                                                    C A N A D A                                                                Active Rail                        Industrial Areas            Potential Sites !
mi  8
Olympic Pipeline              Deep Water Marine Port*    Major Roads (State)    Major Roads (National) !                    Feasibility Study Base Map                                                                                    Juan de Fuca                             marine ports shown on this map (WSDOT,        Olympic Pipeline, Delivery Line                                                   Aviation Biofuels Infrastructure                                                                                      Strait of                    FRIDAY HARBOR AIRPORT     http://www.wsdot.wa.gov/Freight/Marine.htm).     * Barge terminals are located at all deep water                  Airport (FAA Class Primary or Reliever)                     Snohomish, King and Pierce Counties)   Incorporated Cities (Whatcom, Skagit,




















101                                                                                                                       PORT OF ANACORTES !                                                    G e o r g ia  Strait of !      27       24










21                                                                                                                                26  25                         PORT OF BELLINGHAM ! !   BELLINGHAM INT'L AIRPORT
!   PORT OF TACOMA   ! ! ! !                                                         S o un d P ug e t                                                             23 ! !
17







19   20  22                          PORT OF SEATTLE     16
5   1      BOEING FIELD/KING COUNTY INT'L AIRPORT                    PAINE FIELD-SNOHOMISH COUNTY AIRPORT ! PORT OF EVERETT !                                                                  SEATTLE-TACOMA INT'L AIRPORT      ! ! ! !                                                    5                                                5
!               18        
!               90   La ke
AUBURN MUNICIPAL AIRPORT               ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! !                   Wa s h in gt o n  
2 through 15
405                                          HARV EY AIRFIELD                                                                          Potential sites                                                                    2                                                       90                    site (29) in Tri-Cities  Additional potential                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                  U S A   C A N A D A

Aviation Biofuels Infrastructure                North-end Detail                                                                                  Harbor Island Detail
Feasibility Study Base Map Details                                      24 !
P u g e t
!  Potential Sites                                    Strai t o f
G e o r g i a                                                                                                                       S o u n d
Incorporated Cities (Whatcom, Skagit,                                               27 !                                                                                                                                                                        Y
Snohomish, King and Pierce Counties)                   U S A                                                                                                                                                                                                  FW
Industrial Areas                                          C A N A D A                       BELL IN GHAM INT'L AIRPORT
AS KA
Major Roads (National)
AL
PO RT O F BELLING HA M !
Major Roads (State)                                                                                                                                                                                                      13TH AVE SW
!  Deep Water Marine Port*                                                                                                                         !
o                                        5 !
Airport (FAA Class Primary or Reliever)                                                                                                                                                                            17 ! 18
16                            UTAH AVE S
Active Rail                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                    E MARGINAL WAY S
Olympic Pipeline                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   COLORADO AVE S
Olympic Pipeline, Delivery Line
W                     16TH AVE SW                      AV E S
* Barge terminals are located at all deep water marine
TH
ports on these maps (WSDOT, http://www.wsdot.wa.                                                                                                                                              26
gov/Freight/Marine.htm).                                         FRIDAY HARBO R AIRPORT
PO RT O F ANAC O RTE S !                                                                                KL IC
Sources: Port of Seattle, 2016 (Pipeline); WA UTC, 2016                                                                                                                                                                              KI T
(Pipeline); WSDOT, 2012 (Rail), 2015 (State Routes) &                                                             25 !                                                                                                             AT
2016 (Deep Water Marine Ports & City Boundaries). ! 26                                                A
Industrial areas include PSRC MICs (2005); WA State                                                                                                                                                                                    V
23                                              E
!                                                              B
Dept. of Ecology 2010 existing state-wide aircraft                                                                                                                                                                                         PORT OF SEATTLE                                R
G                                   ALASKAN WAY VIADUCT
transportation uses (land use code 43) & manufacturing        0   1.75  3.5       7                                                                                                       0   325  650      1,300
mi                                                                                                                        Feet
uses in Skagit & Whatcom Counties (land use codes
20-36, 39); the South Tacoma MIC (Tacoma, 2015); King
County Industrial/Mfg. Consolidated Zoning in the cities
of Auburn, Renton, Kent, Tukwila, Algona & Pacific             Port of Tacoma Detail                                                                                              Renton-Tukwila Detail
(2014); & industrial zoning in Everett (2015; M-1, M-2,
M-S, C-2), Snohomish County (2016; HI, IP, LI), Skagit                                                                                                                                                                                          405
County (2016; AVR, AVR-L, BR-HI, BR-LI), Whatcom
County (2016; HII, LII, GM, GI, RIM, AO) & Bellingham                                                                                                                                                                             SW GRADY WAY                    SW 16TH ST
(2012; AO, C/I, C/I/RM, GI, HII, I, I/RM, LII).                                   C o m m e n c e m e n t
B a y                        22
DRAFT Date: 9/13/2016 !   20                             W
!                                      W V      14
AL                   R S                   LE !    S D                   Y R                  RE                  D                  AC                     SW                      LO NG                     VE
PORT OF ! 6
ANDOVER PARK E
T A C O M A                                                                                                      13
21                                                                             OAKESDALE A    12
! 5 !
!             19                                                               9 !
North-end     5                                                                                   !                                                                                                                   4
! !
! ! ! 2
! ! 10 11 ! 3 LIND AVE SW
7  8    SW 27 T
H
2                705                                                                ST
101                                                                      !
5                           15
405
Harbor Island        90
Renton-Tukwila
5
Port of Tacoma                       I          0   0.25  0.5       1                                                                                                       0   325  650      1,300
mi                                                                                                                       Feet

3 Site Evaluation
The six most feasible properties identified in Section 2.1 were further
evaluated using more detailed and refined evaluation criteria.
This section describes the information used to evaluate these sites
and the results of that evaluation.

3.1   Site Evaluation Criteria          3.2   Site Evaluation Results
The following additional criteria were used to              The six sites were evaluated using the criteria
further examine the feasibility of the top six sites:          described in Section 3.1. A summary of the
findings is presented in Table 2.
Availability to lease or purchase site based on
communications with property owners
Site maps showing existing conditions, schematic
Land use regulations affecting the property              layouts and concepts for improvements at each
site, and a more detailed evaluation matrix are
--- Permitting and development requirements
available in the Full Report Task 3.
--- Long-range plans for the site (if different
from current land use regulations)
--- Legal constraints related to adding
additional fueling infrastructure
Review of available Olympic Pipeline, state,
and federal guidelines
Site suitability for desired infrastructure for
short-term and long-term aviation biofuel
capacity
--- Existing infrastructure
--- Infrastructure changes required (including
access infrastructure)













10                                  Aviation Biofuels Infrastructure Feasibility Study

Table 2: Summary of Findings
Availability to          Land Use &                                    Screening
Property                                                 Site Suitability
Lease or Purchase        Plans                                 Outcome

Currently owned by Port of     Zoned for Aviation    Existing jet fuel use; no rail
Sea-Tac Airport
Seattle; leased to Sea-Tac     Operations; limited   access; would provide added           YES
Fuel Farm
Fuel, LLC                     land available        truck offload capacity

Owned by Phillips 66 (one                          Existing jet fuel use; rail
Phillips 66/                                       Industrial zoning;
parcel) and Olympic Pipeline                        access would require spur
Olympic Pipeline                                  wetlands on west                                          YES
(one parcel); ability to lease                         across other properties and
Renton Terminal                                   side of parcels
tanks and/or property                              wetlands

Commercial         No direct access to pipeline;
Owned by the Boeing
Boeing Renton                                   zoning; re-zone      adjacent to rail main line;
Company; others hold right                                                               NO
Longacres                                      to Industrial use      would require fuel tanks,
of first offer
required             pumps, and pipes

Owned by Leuqar BB,         Commercial         No direct access to pipeline;
Tukwila             LLC (one parcel, could be      zoning; re-zone      adjacent to rail main line;
NO
Longacres          available for purchase) and    to Industrial use      would require fuel tanks,
City of Tukwila (one parcel)    required             pumps, and pipes

North-end                                                           Existing jet fuel use; existing
Owned by refineries           Industrial zoning                                           YES
Refinery                                                                rail and marine access

No means to inject into
pipeline; pipeline flow is
Industrial zoning;     opposite direction required
Harbor Island        Owned by refineries           limited land          and is too expensive and               NO
available             impractical to reverse;
existing fuel use; existing rail
and marine access





Aviation Biofuels Infrastructure Feasibility Study                                    11


Conceptual Infrastructure
4 Needs, Design and Cost          Estimation
As a result of the site evaluation described in Section 3, the following
three sites were selected for conceptual design and cost estimating:
(1) Sea-Tac Airport Fuel Farm
(2) Phillips 66/Olympic Pipeline Renton Terminal
(3) Tesoro Anacortes Refinery (as a proxy for any of three refineries)
Based on the information obtained showing a large range for
potential cost and site logistics, both short-term and long-term
solutions were developed at those sites where feasible, resulting in
the following list of six implementation options:
(1A) Sea-Tac Airport Fuel Farm Small Volume  Existing Roadway
(1B) Sea-Tac Airport Fuel Farm Small Volume  SR 509 Connector
(Future Infrastructure)
(2A) Renton Terminal Small Volume  Receive Offsite-Blended
Aviation Biofuel via Truck
(2B) Renton Terminal  Receive Neat Biofuel via Truck and Jet-A via
Pipeline, On-site Blending
(2C) Renton Terminal  Receive Neat Biofuel via Rail and Jet-A via
Pipeline, On-site Blending
(3)   Tesoro Anacortes Refinery  Blend Aviation Biofuel at an
Existing Refinery
The following sections describe each of the implementation options
in more detail, including the infrastructure required and the logistics
behind the operation of each option. A conceptual cost estimate
and estimated schedule are provided for each option. Conceptual
designs and cost estimates are included at the end of this section.

4.1   Near-Term/Small Volume        Table 3 summarizes the maximum capacity (i.e.,
Supply Transitioning to         annual throughput in gallons/year), of neat (i.e.,
100 percent) biofuel for the three identified sites
Long-Term/Large Volume     and the various options for each site that the
Supply                      proposed infrastructure can support. The volume
of neat biofuel for Option 2A varies based upon
the blend of biofuel that can be delivered to the
Options were identified that could feasibly provide        site, hence the volumes of neat biofuel for each
an initial small volume supply of aviation biofuel            blend have been shown. The capacity of each
(up to 5 million gallons per year) while also laying          option is limited due to a number of factors, such
the ground for the development of a larger facility          as the truck or rail offloading capacity, receiving
to support future, long-term, large volume supply         and blending tank capacity, and the amount of
(up to 100 million gallons per year).                         time to transfer the final product between modes
or to the pipeline.

Table 3: Maximum Capacity of Neat Biofuel for Three Identified Sites
Maximum Annual Neat
Option                      Description
Biofuel Throughput (gal/yr)
1A      Sea-Tac Fuel Farm Small Volume  Existing Roadway                        5,000,000
1B      Sea-Tac Fuel Farm Small Volume  SR 509 Connector                        5,000,000
14,308,000 (20/80 blend) to 
2A      Renton  Receive aviation biofuel via truck
35,770,000 (50/50 blend)
2B      Renton  Receive neat biofuel via truck and Jet-A via pipeline                 71,529,780
2C      Renton  Receive neat biofuel via rail and Jet-A via pipeline                   82,680,000
Tesoro  Blend aviation biofuel at refinery; receive neat biofuel via
3                                                                       100,000,000+
rail or marine via existing infrastructure









14                                  Aviation Biofuels Infrastructure Feasibility Study

4.2   Site Options:                     Option 1A  Integrate Infrastructure
Infrastructure Needs and      with Existing Tanks and Roadways
Conceptual Designs          The proposed facility at Sea-Tac Airport would
serve as a near-term facility to support up to
Site 1: Sea-Tac Airport Fuel Farm Site        5 million gallons annually of neat biofuel that
would be delivered to the facility via truck and
blended on-site with Jet-A currently received via
the Olympic Pipeline. The fuel farm currently has
a single truck offload position; however, the fuel
farm has space allocated for construction of a
second. Despite this intention, Swissport, which
operates the fuel farm on behalf of the Sea-Tac
Airport Fuel Consortium, indicated the existing
truck offloading rack was not ideal as the pump
was installed at a level too high to easily drain a
transport truck. Additionally, vehicle movement
does not allow a truck to offload and turn around
to exit within the existing fuel facility footprint.
Marine Port
Therefore, the truck must be escorted onto the
Airport
Olympic Pipeline                                               airport operating area to exit another gate from
Delivery Line                                                 the airport property. No rail or marine access is
Active Rail                                                   available for this option.
The installation of a new dedicated neat biofuel
truck offloading facility is proposed in the
Site 1                      unstriped parking lot east of the existing fuel farm.
This location allows for a truck to offload, turn
around, and exit back onto S. 190th Street and
28th Avenue (refer to Exhibit 1A).
Option 1B  Integrate with Future
Tanks and Roadways
The Washington State Department of
Transportation is in the planning stages for the
SR 509 extension project. In addition, the Port
of Seattle has proposed expansion of airport
facilities to the south of the fuel facility (refer to
Exhibit 1B) that include a connector road to the
new SR 509.
As the timeline for the SR 509 connector is
unknown (currently estimated to be built in
2031), the costs presented for this future site are
presented as a separate option. If Option 1A is
constructed and the connector road is built at a
later date, there will be some unidentified cost
to provide access into and out of the site. For
purposes of this estimate, it is assumed these
costs would be borne by another entity and


Aviation Biofuels Infrastructure Feasibility Study                                    15

not by the project. The site improvements that            Neat biofuel is offloaded into a new dedicated
have been developed in Option 1A also allow             100,000-gallon API 650 tank adjacent to the
fuel trucks to enter and exit the facility from the            truck offload racks. The proposed tank has
proposed connector road with limited roadway           been sized to receive approximately seven
modifications. If the connector road is constructed        truck deliveries of neat biofuel prior to testing
first, the costs presented for Option 1B include            of fuel for conformance to ASTM D7566. A
all work associated with the construction of the           new 500,000-gallon API 650 tank would be
biofuel receipt and storage system.                       constructed adjacent to the 100,000-gallon tank
to receive up to 400,000 gallons of Jet-A (80/20
Infrastructure Requirements to              blend) direct from the Olympic Pipeline or from
existing tanks within the facility. Once the Jet-A
Support Near-Term On-Site Blending        is received, it would be tested for conformance
and Storage                              to ASTM D1655 if required. Following testing of
both products, the 100,000 gallons of neat biofuel
Initial calculations show one new dual-arm offload        would be transferred using a new fuel transfer
rack could easily accommodate up to 5 million            pump into the new 500,000-gallon tank to create
gallons of neat biofuel per annum. This assumes          the blend of aviation biofuel. Once blended, the
seven truck and trailer transports every week              fuel would be tested for conformance to ASTM
(14,000 gallon capacity). It is recommended to            D1655 then transferred from the new blending
install a second offload rack for redundancy. The          tank into one of the three existing hydrant system
biofuel offload rack could also provide Sea-Tac            issue tanks to then be delivered direct to aircraft
Airport fuel supply assurance contingency for the         through the existing hydrant system infrastructure.
receipt of Jet-A via truck in the event of pipeline           The new tanks in this option have been sized to
disruptions.                                                accommodate an 80/20 blend ratio.
During preliminary discussions, there was interest         One option to allow for receipt of neat biofuel in
in having a fully integrated biofuel system where           a more expeditious and cost-effective manner
neat biofuel would be received into a new storage         would be to install two 50,000-gallon shoptank
and then transferred and blended in any             fabricated horizontal tanks to receive and store
one of the eight existing tanks. However, the              the neat biofuel and then transfer and blend in
option covered here is for neat biofuel receipt              one of the existing tanks within the fuel farm.
and blending infrastructure to be developed as a          This option requires a smaller footprint and
standalone system with the ability for future full            would allow the two horizontal tanks to be sold,
integration. This arrangement will not affect the            repurposed, or relocated when the demand
current pipeline receipt capacity and fuel farm             exceeds the capacity of Option 1A or 1B.
operations. It is anticipated that the fuel farm
expansion shown in the planning documents of          The following provides an overview of the
Option 1B are required to provide additional days         infrastructure required to add neat biofuel receipt
of reserve and to meet the growing demand of jet         and blending capabilities at Sea-Tac Airport as
fuel at the airport.                                              outlined in Exhibits 1A and 1B.






16                                  Aviation Biofuels Infrastructure Feasibility Study

Required infrastructure:                               Primary challenges:
Civil roadwork for site access                               Sea-Tac Airport has very limited land for
expansion of all airport operations, including
Concrete structures for sized containment of
its fuel farm. The Sustainable Airport Master
truck offloading operations
Plan is currently being developed and identifies
(2) 400 gallon per minute (gpm) pump and filter             space for fuel farm expansion to the east of the
separator offloading skids                                 existing fuel farm location, as shown in Exhibit
1B.
(1) 100,000 gallon vertical aboveground storage
tank  field erected                                         The desire to limit the number of fuel transport
trucks on the roadways around the airport
(1) 500,000 gallon vertical aboveground storage
limits the capacity of this option. The 5 million
tank  field erected
gallons annually was derived by imposing a
Earthen berm surrounding the two new tanks to            limit of seven trucks per week on average to
provide containment                                   minimize the environmental impact of the truck
traffic and truck emissions, but the property
(2) 1,000 gpm fuel transfer pumps
could feasibly accommodate up to 10 million
Approximately 200 feet of 6-inch offload piping             gallons annually.
Approximately 500 feet of 8-inch pipeline                  The future South Access Expressway impacts
receipt piping                                              a portion of the site currently available for
expansion. There are likely to be grade changes
Approximately 500 feet of 8-inch tank transfer
with the development of the connector road
piping
that have not been accounted for in the vehicle
Integration into existing tank gauging and                   simulations.
controls system
No rail or marine access is available at this site
nor will it likely be available in the future.
Primary benefits:
The existing fuel facility would need to be
Property already owned by the Port of Seattle
reconfigured to support the truck offloading
Provides direct access to airport hydrant                    operations and blending facilities.
fueling system
Existing zoning is suitable and the Port would
be the permitting agency
Lower capital costs would be required for this
improvement








Aviation Biofuels Infrastructure Feasibility Study                                    17

Site 2: Phillips 66/Olympic Pipeline            Option 2A  Receive Blended Aviation
Renton Terminal Site                        Biofuel via Truck
The existing tank facilities at Phillips 66 can
accommodate only one new product in their
current configuration, which suggests that only
pre-blended fuel could be delivered if no new
tanks were added. Therefore, the first option
for this site is focused on the near term and is
designed to receive previously blended aviation
biofuel via truck using an existing offload position
at the Phillips 66 terminal and storing the fuel in
existing Tank 3. In preliminary talks, Phillips 66
suggested new offload equipment be installed
Marine Port                                                  and dedicated to the offloading process for
Airport                                                      blended aviation biofuels. This equipment would
Olympic Pipeline                                               be located within containment at one of the
Delivery Line                                                 existing truck offload islands (refer to Exhibit
Active Rail                                                   2A). It is important to note this option transfers
the cost burden from the physical infrastructure
to the entity providing and blending the fuel at
another location. The transportation costs per unit
Site 2           volume of neat biofuel will increase as well due to
blending off-site.
The existing Phillips 66 truck offloading facilities
can accommodate up to 14 additional truck
and trailer transports per day (for a total of
approximately 100 trucks per day). Assuming
The Phillips 66 and Olympic Pipeline Renton
14,000 gallons per load, this equates to 196,000
Terminal sites are immediately adjacent to each
gallons per day, or 4,666 barrels per day (bbls/
other in Renton. The combination of these two
day). As this is pre-blended aviation biofuel and
parcels is considered Site 2. The Olympic Pipeline
assuming a 50/50 blend, this equates to an annual
passes through the northern portion of the site
maximum throughput of 35,770,000 gallons
and serves the Phillips 66 tanks at the southern
of neat biofuel. Assuming an 80/20 blend, the
end of the site with a dedicated Jet-A pipeline
annual maximum throughput would be 14,308,000
running west from this site to the airport. For this
gallons of neat biofuel per year.
site to receive neat biofuel or aviation biofuel,
three options of development were considered
Once blended fuel is received into existing Tank
to serve the near term (Option 2A), intermediate
3 and tested for conformance to ASTM D1655,
term (Option 2B), and long-term (Option 2C).
the fuel would be transferred via the existing
The infrastructure required for each option builds
dedicated pipeline to Sea-Tac Airport during an
upon the prior option in an effort to eliminate the
available window when Sea-Tac Airport is not
expense of installing infrastructure that can only
receiving Jet-A from one of the three refineries
be used for a single option, as explained in more
on the Olympic Pipeline. This transfer currently
detail in the description of each option below.
occurs once every three days.




18                                  Aviation Biofuels Infrastructure Feasibility Study

As a single tank, Tank 3 is used for both receipt            Primary benefits:
and issue. Once the tank is filled and tested for
The site provides direct access to the Sea-Tac
conformance, it would be quarantined from future
Airport delivery pipeline.
receipt until the fuel could be transferred through
the delivery pipeline to Sea-Tac Airport. This                 Aviation biofuel storage could be managed by
constraint would require careful planning between           Phillips 66, reducing ownership and operational
the operator and the pipeline. The transfer of                 risk for the Port of Seattle or external parties.
aviation biofuel from Tank 3 would require a new
The site is zoned for industrial use.
8-inch transfer pipe be installed from Tank 3
to a new inbound pipeline pump, filtration, and              Phillips 66 has an existing offload position
meter on the Olympic Pipeline site. The proposed           available that can handle up to 14 trucks per
transfer rate of 1,200 gpm (1,714 barrels/hour                day or 196,000 gallons of aviation biofuel per
(bbls/hr)) would require a 250-horsepower motor.            day.
It is uncertain if the site has the electrical capacity
Phillips 66 has an existing 8,000 bbl tank
to add a new pump and motor.
available for onsite storage of aviation biofuel.
Jet-A fuel would be delivered into the site during            Phillips 66 and Olympic Pipeline Company
deliveries to Sea-Tac Airport. For calculation                  have expressed positive interest during initial
purposes, it is assumed Tank 3 has an                      conversations.
approximate usable volume of 6,800 bbls, which
This initial option does not require wetlands
equates to 85 percent of the nominal tank volume
mitigation.
of 8,000 bbls. With the existing 8-inch dedicated
pipeline, the proposed transfer rate of 1,714
Primary challenges:
bbls/hr would require four hours to transfer the
maximum usable volume.                              Requires aviation biofuel be delivered to site
via truck and blending to occur offsite by
Required infrastructure:                                  others, which shifts the cost burden to the fuel
contractor. These costs are not reflected in the
(1) 400 gpm pump and filter separator
cost estimate as they are unknown, but could
offloading skid at existing truck offloading
be substantial.
island
Requires modifications to the existing pipeline
(1) 1,200 gpm, 500-foot TDH pipeline transfer
to pump into the dedicated pipeline.
pump
Requires ownership and/or long-term lease
(1) 1,200 gpm custody transfer meter
arrangements to be established.
(1) 1,200 gpm filter separator vessel
Approximately 960 feet of 8-inch pipeline
receipt piping (to be installed in Option 2A in
parallel with pipeline issue piping but not used
until Option 2B)
Approximately 1,250 feet of 8-inch pipeline
issue piping
Integration into the existing tank gauging and
controls system




Aviation Biofuels Infrastructure Feasibility Study                                    19

Option 2B  Receive Neat Biofuel via         Required infrastructure (in addition to
Truck and Jet-A via Pipeline, On-site         infrastructure outlined in Option 2A):
Blending                                   (2) 82,500 bbl API 650 storage tanks complete
with containment dike for three tanks for
When the daily receipt of blended biofuel exceeds           Option 2C expansion
the 196,000 gal/day (4,666 bbls/day) capacity of
(1) 1,200 gpm custody transfer meter
Option 2A, or when it is desired to receive neat
biofuel into the Phillips 66 site, the next option               (1) 1,200 gpm filter separator
(2B) could be implemented. This option expands
Installation of 300 feet of 8-inch pipeline receipt
the 2A system infrastructure to reconfigure Tank 3
piping to connect to piping installed in Option
to receive neat biofuel and the construction of two
2A to new tank
new 82,500 bbl storage tanks: one for the receipt
of Jet-A from the Olympic Pipeline and a second            Activation of 960 feet of 8-inch pipeline receipt
to blend the product and prepare for delivery to              piping (installed in Option 2A)
Sea-Tac Airport (refer to Exhibit 2B). The selection
Installation of 500 feet of 8-inch fuel transfer
of 82,500 bbl tanks was made based upon a
piping
usable volume of 70,000 bbls (85 percent of tank
shell volume) to allow an 80/20 blend at peak               Installation of new 1,200 gpm transfer pump
capacity. If it were certain a greater blend ratio                pad to transfer fuel from tank to tank
approaching the maximum 50/50 could be used,
Integration into existing tank gauging and
the two 82,500 bbl tanks could be reduced in size.
controls system
For this option, up to 14 truck loads per day
Primary benefits:
of neat biofuel would be received into Tank 3,
restricted by the capacity of the single offloading            The site provides direct access to the Sea-Tac
position available from Phillips 66, and then tested           Airport delivery pipeline.
for conformance to ASTM D7566. Due to the daily
Aviation biofuel storage could be managed by
receipt volume capacity of 4,666 bbls per day
Phillips 66, reducing ownership and operational
and the usable tank capacity of 6,800 bbls, the
risk for the Port of Seattle or external parties.
fuel would need to be tested at the end of each
day and then transferred into the new blending              Phillips 66 is not directly associated with any
tank overnight allowing Tank 3 to be available for             of the three companies currently supplying
receipts the next day.                                         conventional jet fuel to Sea-Tac Airport, which
provides the opportunity to develop blending
Jet-A fuel would be received into one of the two             arrangements with all three suppliers.
new tanks during a pipeline transfer to Sea-
The site is zoned for industrial use.
Tac Airport and then tested for conformance
to ASTM D1655. This pipeline transfer occurs               The site provides space for installation of
on a three-day cycle, as previously outlined in                additional tanks adjacent to existing tank and
Option 2A. Therefore, at a minimum, the volume             pipeline infrastructure.
of fuel received would coincide with the amount
Phillips 66 has an existing offload position
required to blend with the volume of neat biofuel
available that can handle up to 14 trucks per
received in the preceding three days. Assuming
day or 196,000 gallons of neat biofuel per day.
an 80/20 blend, each fuel receipt batch would
be a minimum of 55,992 bbls, resulting in a total             Phillips 66 has an existing 8,000 bbl tank
blended volume of 69,990 bbls. This equates to             available for onsite storage of neat biofuel that
a total annual neat biofuel capacity of 71,529,780            would require API gravity tests prior to use for
gallons.                                                       the storage and distribution of aviation biofuel.
Phillips 66 and Olympic Pipeline Company
have expressed positive interest during initial
conversations.


20                                  Aviation Biofuels Infrastructure Feasibility Study

Primary challenges:                                  Option 2C  Receive Neat Biofuel via
Requires modifications to the existing Olympic          Rail and Jet-A via Pipeline, On-site
pipeline to receive Jet-A into the facility;                 Blending
currently all Jet-A bypasses the facility and
passes through to the Sea-Tac Airport delivery         As described above, Option 2B capacity is limited
pipeline.                                                   to just over 70 million gallons per year due to the
single truck offloading position available, and
A source of aviation biofuel would be required
potentially less, depending upon the source of the
to transport over 70 million gallons of fuel
neat product. It also relies exclusively on transport
annually into the facility. The fuel could be
of neat biofuel by truck into the facility. Option 2C
delivered via rail or barge to an alternate facility
shifts the delivery from truck to rail and includes
and loaded onto trucks to allow blending and
installation of a rail spur off the BNSF Railway
pipeline transfer to occur from this site. The
mainline into the facility, as shown in Exhibit 2C.
cost of this additional infrastructure has not
This spur would include two tracks with multiple
been included in the evaluation of this option.
switches to allow for train movement into and out
Western (undeveloped) portion of the site is              of the 16 offloading positions while remaining off
wetlands.                                           the highly utilized BNSF mainline.
Requires ownership and/or long-term lease
Fuel would be offloaded from the rail cars and
arrangements to be established.
pumped into a new 90,000 bbl (usable volume of
76,500 bbls) API 650 storage tank adjacent to the
two tanks installed in Option 2B. It is assumed
with this new rail spur, a unit train delivery would
be provided. A unit train is defined as a dedicated
tank car train consisting of approximately 100
tank cars with a total capacity of 3,180,000
gallons, or 75,714 bbls. The entire unit train
would be offloaded into the new neat biofuel tank
through the 16 rail car offloading positions. As 16
of the 100 rail cars are offloaded at a time, the
rail cars would have to be shuffled through the
rack and the siding. It is assumed a locomotive
and tank cars would be operated by a private
rail firm with costs built into the contracted price
for delivery. It is estimated that 16 cars could be
handled every 6 hours, requiring approximately 42
hours to completely offload a unit train with the
proposed configuration.
The unit train would be dedicated to the delivery
of neat biofuel to this facility and would make
round trips from the biofuel refinery location to
this site. As the refinery location is unknown
at this time, the round trip time can only be
estimated. Assuming the refinery has the capacity
to supply 3,180,000 gallons every two weeks and
the rail car round trip can be completed within a
two-week window, a total of 82,680,000 gallons



Aviation Biofuels Infrastructure Feasibility Study                                    21

of neat biofuel could be supplied annually. This            Primary benefits:
could be increased if the turnaround time of the
The site provides direct access to the Sea-Tac
rail deliveries could be reduced. The constraint
Airport delivery pipeline.
would then be the ability to receive enough
Jet-A from the pipeline, store on-site, and blend;            Neat biofuel, Jet-A, and aviation biofuel storage
therefore, the constraint would become the tank             and blending could be managed by Phillips 66,
capacity.                                                     reducing ownership and operational risk for the
Port of Seattle or external parties.
Jet-A would be received from the Olympic
Phillips 66 is not directly associated with any
Pipeline on the three-day cycle, and fuel would
of the three companies currently supplying
then be blended and tested to conform to ASTM
conventional jet fuel to Sea-Tac Airport, which
D1655 specifications. During the two-week time
provides the opportunity to develop blending
between train deliveries, the neat biofuel tank
arrangements with all three suppliers.
would be drawn down as each batch of fuel is
blended. Once the blend is tested, it would be              The site is zoned for industrial use.
transferred via pipeline to Sea-Tac Airport. At
The site provides space for installation of
an 80/20 blend, a one unit train could provide
additional tanks adjacent to existing tank and
15,900,000 gallons (378,573 bbls) of blended
pipeline infrastructure.
aviation biofuel every two weeks. This would
require deliveries of 12,720,000 gallons (302,857            Rail spur (approximately 0.8 mile) from BNSF
bbls) of Jet-A from the pipeline to the Phillips 66              mainline allows delivery direct to site without
site every two weeks. With deliveries every three             having to receive elsewhere via rail or barge
days, this equates to an average Jet-A receipt of             and transport into facility via truck.
2,725,700 gallons (64,898 bbls) each cycle. At a
Phillips 66 and Olympic Pipeline Company
50/50 blend, the Jet-A receipt over the two-week
have expressed positive interest during initial
period equals that of the rail delivery, or 3,180,000
conversations.
gallons. From this analysis, the greater ratio of
Jet-A to aviation biofuel requires additional Jet-A
Primary challenges:
into the Phillips 66 site and additional handling for
the blending operations and pipeline transfers into          Western (undeveloped) portion of the site is
Sea-Tac Airport.                                            wetlands.
Rail spur could involve substantial wetlands
Required infrastructure (in addition to
impacts, high capital cost, and require property
infrastructure outlined in Options 2A and 2B):
acquisitions and/or easements.
(1) 90,000 bbl API 650 storage tank in existing
Requires ownership and/or long-term lease
dike
arrangements be determined.
Rail spur lines
(16) 400 gpm offloading pump skids at each rail
position
Installation of 850 feet of 20-inch receipt piping
from rail spur
Installation of 260 feet of 8-inch piping to
pipeline issue manifold
Integration into existing tank gauging and
controls system



22                                  Aviation Biofuels Infrastructure Feasibility Study

Site 3: Tesoro Refinery Site                     have yet to be determined. For this report, it is
(proxy for any of three refineries)              assumed that upgrades would be required at
the marine facility and at the rail car offloading
facility along with new piping and new fuel
storage tanks. These improvements are detailed
below. To date, detailed discussions have not
been completed with Tesoro representatives to
determine the volume capacity of the receipt for
each mode nor the available tank capacity and
Site 3                          blending mechanisms. In addition, there is no
guarantee that infrastructure available today for
aviation biofuels blending would be available in
future years, therefore an approach was taken
to assume infrastructure and storage capacity
Marine Port                                                  would be required, a potentially very conservative
Airport                                                      approach.
Olympic Pipeline
Delivery Line                                                 Once the aviation biofuel has been received on-
Active Rail                                                   site into a tank, it would be tested to conform
to ASTM D7566 specification then blended with
Jet-A (produced on-site) and certified to ASTM
D1655. The fuel would then be transported on
the Olympic Pipeline using the delivery method
utilized by Jet-A today, with no additional
infrastructure requirements downstream of the
refinery.
Required infrastructure:
The third site reviewed would consolidate the               Upgrades to marine facility to allow for barge
blending process upstream at the refinery. This              offloading of neat biofuel
analysis examined the available infrastructure               10,000 feet of 12-inch marine receipt piping
at the Tesoro Refinery located in Anacortes on               routed to new neat biofuel tank
the Olympic Pipeline. This refinery is one of
three, in addition to BP and Shell, that currently              Upgrades to rail offloading facility to allow for
produce and deliver Jet-A to Sea-Tac Airport and            offloading of neat biofuel
that could be considered for blending of fuel.                4,500 feet of 12-inch rail receipt piping routed
The Tesoro site is considered a proxy site for                 to new neat biofuel tank
estimating an anticipated cost at any of the three
refinery sites and is not meant to preclude the               (1) 90,000 bbl API 650 storage tank for receipt
other refineries from consideration.                           of neat biofuel
(1) 90,000 bbl API 650 storage tank for
The Tesoro Refinery, as shown in Exhibit 3,                  blending of aviation biofuel
has marine loading/offloading capabilities,
rail offloading capabilities, and truck loading/                 5,000 feet of 12-inch Jet-A transfer piping for
offloading capabilities. Currently, both crude                  blending
and biofuels (ethanol and biodiesel) are received            5,500 feet of 20-inch suction piping to pipeline
via rail to the site. The addition of neat biofuel                 transfer pumps
via any of the three receipt modes could be
accommodated into the operation with varying             Integration into existing tank gauging and
degrees of infrastructure enhancements that                controls system


Aviation Biofuels Infrastructure Feasibility Study                                    23

Primary benefits:                                        product pipeline that provides refined products
to Seattle and a dedicated 12-inch spur line to
The Tesoro Refinery is an existing petroleum
Sea-Tac Airport.
facility that would not require new permitting or
land acquisition.                                           No downstream infrastructure modifications
would be required.
Although the focus is on the Tesoro refinery
for this analysis, in theory multiple refineries,               The potential exists for Portland International
or all three refineries, could develop similar                 Airport to benefit from this investment and
infrastructure allowing multiple receipt options             receive aviation biofuel from the Olympic
for blending and potentially more competitive             Pipeline.
pricing.
Primary challenges:
Although there is uncertainty over ownership
and operational structure, the current                     Approval is required to feed a new product
assumption is that Tesoro would continue                (aviation biofuel) directly into the main Olympic
to own and operate the facility where the                  Pipeline. While the product would meet ASTM
additional infrastructure is constructed with                D1655, there could be operational constraints
the possibility it would lease the facility for a                with other oil product suppliers in addition
set rate per barrel or long-term annual contract            to a potential lengthy approval process with
cost. Both the Tesoro full ownership or tank               Olympic Pipeline Company to send aviation
lease options would reduce operational risk               biofuel through a critical regional multi-product
compared to infrastructure built and maintained           pipeline. Although the Olympic Pipeline
by the Port on Sea-Tac Airport property.                   Company did not anticipate any difficulty in
receiving approval, this would be the first case
Tesoro (along with the other two refiners) have
in the U.S. for aviation biofuel transported
experience handling and blending aviation
in a multi-product pipeline. As a common
biofuels.
carrier, pipeline testing and approval would
There is a direct link to the BNSF mainline with             be required, and there is a risk of an approval
crude offloading facilities. Current capacity                 process taking longer than anticipated.
is 50,000 bbls of oil per day by train. Some
Selecting a single refinery for storage and
modification would be required to add a neat
blending could result in much higher blends of
biofuel offload facility.
aviation biofuel in specific jet fuel batches from
There is a direct link to marine offloading                    that refiner compared to no blending at the
facilities:                                                        other refineries.
--- Tesoro Anacortes Wharf has one 16-inch              Leaving ownership and operations to the
and five 12-inch petroleum product pipelines           refiner(s) could result in high cost escalation
connecting the wharf to the refinery's                   or economic uncertainties that could lead the
storage and supports vessels with a deck              refiner(s) to stop storing and blending aviation
height of 22 feet, a berthing distance of                 biofuel if appropriate restrictions are not
1,634 feet, and a 45-foot depth.                        specified in any contract terms.
Truck offload and rack facilities are available at            Leaving ownership to the refiner results in no
all three refineries.                                             control of the operations or availability of the
fuel and blending process.
The refineries are the current producers of
conventional jet fuel provided to Sea-Tac                 Co-locating the biofuel storage at the refineries
Airport.                                                       and using the pipeline as the sole source of
delivery does not alleviate concerns related to
The site provides direct access to the Olympic
the security of supply in the event of a pipeline
Pipeline through the main 20-inch product
disruption.
pipeline that continues to Portland and carries
all refined products and a parallel 16-inch


24                                  Aviation Biofuels Infrastructure Feasibility Study

4.3   Engineer's Estimate of
Probable Cost for All Sites
and Options
Table 4 summarizes the engineer's estimate
of probable cost for infrastructure for each of
the options. A set of detailed cost estimates is
available in Full Report Task 4.
Table 4: Engineer's Estimate of Probable Cost
Estimated
Max Annual
Construction
Estimated          Neat Biofuel
Option         Description            Cost for
Project Cost          Throughput
Infrastructure
(gal/yr)
Only
Sea-Tac Airport Small
1A                                   $11,720,000           $13,950,000            5,000,000
Volume  Existing Roadway
Sea-Tac Airport Small
1B                                  $9,800,000           $11,700,000            5,000,000
Volume  SR 509 Connector
14,308,000 
Renton  Receive aviation                                                             (20/80 blend) to 
2A                                   $2,430,000            $2,830,000
biofuel via truck                                                                        35,770,000 
(50/50 blend)
Renton  Receive neat
2B      biofuel via truck and Jet-A        $69,200,000           $82,360,000           71,529,780
via pipeline
Renton  Receive neat
2C      biofuel via rail and Jet-A via       $69,600,000           $82,790,000           82,680,000
pipeline
Tesoro  Blend aviation
biofuel at refinery;
3       receive neat biofuel via           $87,500,000           $104,160,000          100,000,000+
rail or marine via existing
infrastructure
* Note: the costs for Options 2A, 2B, and 2C build on top of each other (i.e., Option 2B assumes 2A is already
in place, and Option 2C assumes that 2A and 2B are already in place).





Aviation Biofuels Infrastructure Feasibility Study                                    25

4.4   Estimated Timelines for
All Sites and Options
Table 5 provides the estimated time required
to design, permit, and construct the necessary
infrastructure to allow for operation of the site for
each of the options.
Table 5: Estimated Timeline
Estimated Time Until
Option                      Description
Operational
1A      Sea-Tac Fuel Farm Small Volume  Existing Roadway                       1218 months
1B      Sea-Tac Fuel Farm Small Volume  SR 509 Connector                      1218 months
2A      Renton  Receive aviation biofuel via truck                               1218 months
2B      Renton  Receive neat biofuel via truck and Jet-A via pipeline                  24 months
2C      Renton  Receive neat biofuel via rail and Jet-A via pipeline                  6072 months
Tesoro  Blend aviation biofuel at refinery; receive neat biofuel via
3                                                                       2430 months
rail or marine via existing infrastructure













26                                  Aviation Biofuels Infrastructure Feasibility Study

Figure:   1A         9/22/16 Date           Seattle Port   Sea-Tac International Airport   Aviation Biofuel Feasibility Study    Airport Fuel Farm Site
N

Figure:   1B         9/22/16 Date
ALTERNATE
Seattle Port  Sea-Tac International Airport  Aviation Biofuel Feasibility Study   Airport Fuel Farm Site
SASA ACCESS ROAD
TRUCK FUEL RACK
N   SOUTH ACCESS ROAD

2A     11/02/16 Date      Seattle Port  Sea-Tac International Airport  Aviation Biofuel Feasibility Study Phillips 66/Olympic Pipeline  Renton Terminal

2B     11/02/16 Date      Seattle Port  Sea-Tac International Airport  Aviation Biofuel Feasibility Study Phillips 66/Olympic Pipeline  Renton Terminal

2C     11/02/16 Date      Seattle Port  Sea-Tac International Airport  Aviation Biofuel Feasibility Study Phillips 66/Olympic Pipeline  Renton Terminal

3      11/2/16 Date       Seattle Port  Sea-Tac International Airport  Aviation Biofuel Feasibility Study  Tesoro Anacortes Refinery

5 Implementation Option         Feasibility Evaluation
A feasibility evaluation was completed for each of the six options
described in Section 4 and repeated below:
(1A) Sea-Tac Airport Fuel Farm Small Volume  Existing Roadway
(1B) Sea-Tac Airport Fuel Farm Small Volume  SR 509 Connector
(Future Infrastructure)
(2A) Renton Terminal Small Volume  Receive Offsite-Blended
Aviation Biofuel via Truck
(2B) Renton Terminal  Receive Neat Biofuel via Truck and Jet-A via
Pipeline, On-site Blending
(2C) Renton Terminal  Receive Neat Biofuel via Rail and Jet-A via
Pipeline, On-site Blending
(3)   Tesoro Anacortes Refinery  Blend Aviation Biofuel at an
Existing Refinery
The feasibility evaluation described in this section applies a criteria
scorecard to each of the proposed biofuel infrastructure system
options.

5.1   Criteria Scorecard                 (1B) Sea-Tac Airport Fuel Farm Small Volume 
Categories and Scoring         SR 509 Connector (Future Infrastructure)
(2A) Renton Terminal Small Volume  Receive
The criteria scorecard draws upon information               Offsite-Blended Aviation Biofuel via Truck
from the initial evaluations undertaken in
the earlier phases of work in addition to the                5.2.2 Long-Term Options
infrastructure conceptual designs and cost
estimates provided in the subsequent phases of          Site improvement and implementation greater
analysis. Revisions to the findings were applied           than 18 months and can accommodate target
in instances where new information was made           volumes of 30 to 50 million gallons of unblended
available. Additional measures were included to           neat aviation biofuels with potential to double that
account for general financial risk contingency,             capacity in a future year (past 2025):
existing relationships between the Port of Seattle
and site owners, and public and stakeholder                (2B) Renton Terminal  Receive Neat Biofuel via
acceptance.                                            Truck and Jet-A via Pipeline, On-site Blending
(2C) Renton Terminal  Receive Neat Biofuel via
Scoring is based on a 1 to 5 scale. A score of 1              Rail and Jet-A via Pipeline, On-site Blending
indicates the site does not meet the minimum
requirements for the scoring criteria, while a                 (3) Tesoro Anacortes Refinery  Blend Aviation
score of 5 indicates the option fully meets the                Biofuel at an Existing Refinery
requirement. The criteria are bundled by category
(e.g., environmental constraints, planning and             The opportunity to transition a short-term site to a
permitting, etc.) and are weighted to reflect the            long-term facility or re-purpose a short-term site
relative importance of the criteria to the project            when a transition is made to a long-term site are
objectives. The specific weightings are described         considered in the criteria variables.
in further detail in Section 5.9.
5.3   Criteria Category 1:
Detailed information on each of the individual
scoring criteria is available in the Full Report                        Multi-Modal Delivery Point
Task 5.                                                           Access (Long-Term Only)
5.2   Short-Term and                  Delivery point access is a key evaluation criteria
Long-Term Options           that has been the primary consideration of the
study and a critical component in determining
the sites that were evaluated in this study. Truck,
Criteria categories and category weightings vary          rail, barge and vessel, and pipeline access were
for the short-term and long-term options. The             all considered in the study, with pipeline access
definition of short-term and long-term for the              determined to be a critical aspect in the long-term
purposes of this analysis and the options included        financial competitiveness of supplying aviation
are defined in the following sections.                       biofuel to Sea-Tac Airport. The cost per barrel per
mile for pipeline shipments will be more in-line
5.2.1 Short-Term Options             with current supply cost and reduce the volatility
in both cost and scheduling associated with other
Site improvement and implementation within 18          supply methods.
months and a minimum of 5 million gallons of
unblended neat aviation biofuels capacity. Shortterm
options include the following:
(1A) Sea-Tac Airport Fuel Farm Small Volume 
Existing Roadway


34                                  Aviation Biofuels Infrastructure Feasibility Study

The scoring for Category 1 is consistent across           5.5   Criteria Category 3:
the five variables and based on the following:                      Permitting and Planning
Score              Description                 Permitting and planning, covered in greater detail
in previous sections of the report, were used
1       No possibility for access                      to assess current land ownership, zoning and
permitting, and opportunities for future expansion.
Significant investment required 
2
(right-of-way, capital)
Scoring for Category 3 is consistent across the
Investment required for access                    four variables and based on the following:
3
(new assets on existing right-of-way)
Minimal investment required for access
4                                                  Score                Description
(upgrade of existing assets)
No additional investment required for                               Site has prohibitive constraints
5
access                                              1        that would severely impact initial
development and future expansion
5.4   Criteria Category 2:                        Site has significant constraints that
2       would impact initial development and
Environmental Constraints             future expansion
Site has identified constraints that would
Environmental constraints for each site, covered                 3       impact initial development and future
in greater detail in previous sections of the report,                         expansion
were included to adequately account for general
risks associated with the properties analyzed in                          Site has limited constraints to initial
4
the study.                                                                 development and future expansion
Site has no identified constraints to initial
5
The scoring for Category 2 is consistent across                          development and future expansion
the four variables and based on the following:
Score              Description
Mitigation is not possible or the risk of
1       event would not allow for building of the
facility (insurance requirements)
Mitigation is possible at a significant
2       cost or the risk of event would cause
significant damage
Mitigation is possible at a reasonable
3       cost or the risk of event would cause
some damage
Mitigation is possible at a low cost or the
4
risk of event would cause minor damage
No mitigation is required or there is no
5
risk of an event



Aviation Biofuels Infrastructure Feasibility Study                                    35

5.6   Criteria Category 4: Site         5.6.1 Estimate of Project Costs
Development and Costs
Project costs were estimated for each of the
identified options associated with project
Development of the identified site for anticipated
development and construction. Some of the
short-term and long-term volumes of blended
identified options are currently planned on land
fuel requires various levels of storage capacity
owned by private entities already involved in
and supporting logistical integration and
refining and the supply of refined petroleum
corresponding capital investments. Project
products and biofuel blends. There is potential
development timelines and financial risk are also
that the current owner of an identified option
considered throughout the evaluation process
on private land already used for product supply
to determine whether the site can be developed
and/or biofuel blending may choose to pay for
within the planned ramp-up in aviation biofuel use
the necessary capital investments and price the
and can accommodate target volumes of 30 to 50
cost for those investments in long-term volume
million gallons of unblended neat aviation biofuels
offtake agreements and would be additionally
with the potential to double that capacity in a
incentivized to maintain current market share from
future year (beyond 2025).
other potential suppliers, in the case of one of the
three refinery options.
Scoring for Category 4 is consistent across four
of the five variables, with the exception of project
For purposes of scoring, the total estimated
costs, and is based on the following:
one-time project costs are divided by the total
anticipated annual capacity in gallons to derive a
Score              Description                 per gallon project cost for comparison purposes
as follows:
The capacity goals will not be achieved
1       or there will be high project cost and risk            Score                Description
of delay
The capacity goals will be partially                                 Cost per annual gallon capacity greater
1
2       achieved or there will be substantial                           than $3.00
project cost and risk of delay
Cost per annual gallon capacity between
2
The capacity goals will be primarily                                 $2.25 and $2.99
3       achieved or there will be moderate
project cost and risk of delay                                       Cost per annual gallon capacity between
3
$1.50 and $2.24
The capacity goals will be primarily
4       achieved or there will be low project cost
Cost per annual gallon capacity between
and slight risk of delay                                   4
$0.75 and $1.49
The capacity goals will be achieved or
Cost per annual gallon capacity less than
5       there will be low project cost and risk of                5
$0.74
delay






36                                  Aviation Biofuels Infrastructure Feasibility Study

5.7   Criteria Category 5:              5.8   Criteria Category 6:
Community Acceptance          Contingency and Other
In addition to the variables covered during                 Additional variables primarily cover ongoing
previous sections of this report, additional                 operating costs, supply risks (as opposed to
consideration for interaction with site owners,             site risks covered in environmental constraints),
legal and regulatory challenges, and stakeholder          supply redundancy, and operational flexibility.
and public acceptance were considered in the            These are all critical considerations for the primary
final scorecard and included under the community        stakeholders and address other ongoing efforts
acceptance category.                                  to ensure that overall existing and future fueling
infrastructure can meet the needs of the Port in
Scoring for Category 5 is consistent across all             terms of overall capacity and reduction of supply
four variables and is based on the following:               risk through redundancy measures.
Scoring for Category 6 is consistent across all
Score              Description                 four variables and based on the following:
The site has very high potential for
1       challenges from stakeholders and/or the            Score                Description
community
The site has very high potential for cost
The site has high potential for challenges
2                                                     1       contingencies and challenges to project
from stakeholders and/or the community
development
The site has medium potential for
The site has high potential for cost
3       challenges from stakeholders and/or the
2       contingencies and challenges to project
community
development
The site has low potential for challenges
4                                                             The site has medium potential for cost
from stakeholders and/or the community
3       contingencies and challenges to project
The site has limited potential for                                    development
5       challenges from stakeholders and/or the
The site has low potential for cost
community
4       contingencies and challenges to project
development
The site has limited potential for
5
contingency and acceptance








Aviation Biofuels Infrastructure Feasibility Study                                    37

5.8.1 Operational Costs               5.8.4 Future Operational
Flexibility
Based on site location and ownership, the
operational cost variable captures the risk of
The operational flexibility variable captures the
potential volatility in transportation pricing. The
ability for a short-term option to be re-purposed
scoring assumes the logistical infrastructure is
for other uses when an alternative long-term
operated by the current facility operator or the
site is brought online or a long-term option to
operator of an adjacent facility (in the case of the
expand to meet future volume requirements
Sea-Tac Airport option) and is meant to capture
is implemented. Higher scores are assumed
the potential for large variations in pricing based
for options that provide flexibility for future
on existing and proposed delivery methods for
anticipated or unanticipated market conditions
neat aviation biofuels and current contractual
relationship with the operator. In the case where a
facility requires biofuels to be blended offsite, the          5.9    Criteria Scorecard
scoring reflects the increased operational cost of                  Weightings
this option.
Within each primary category, weightings were
5.8.2 Supply Risk                      derived for the subcategories. Percentages
applied for the category weightings are based
Similar to the site storage and blending risks               on the perceived importance of each variable
considered in the environmental constraints               to the study objectives outlined by the Port of
category, the supply risk is meant to capture              Seattle, Alaska Airlines, and the Boeing Company.
potential risks of product contamination, primarily         Variables such as pipeline access, which offers
through common carrier arrangement on pipelines        lower long-term supply costs (long-term options),
or other supply infrastructure that supports                and estimated project costs, which will require
multiple products and multiple contact points for          initial capital outlays or financing options, are
transfers and blending, and the potential for leaks         assumed to be critical components in the
or other supply disruptions.                                evaluation of the various options and received
higher overall weightings.
5.8.3 Supply Redundancy
The six primary categories were then weighted to
derive a totals score for each option. Weightings
In the event of a major disruption to conventional
for the short-term options exclude multi-modal
Jet-A supply to the airport, the supply redundancy
delivery point access and are spread fairly
variable captures the benefit of the proposed site
evenly among the remaining categories, with site
in mitigating disruption concerns by providing
development and costs receiving 30 percent,
an alternative supply point for both neat aviation
community acceptance 10 percent, and the
biofuels or blended aviation biofuels, as specified
remaining three categories 20 percent each. For
and designed, as well as conventional Jet-A. The
the long-term weightings, logistical access and
redundancy variable favors sites that provide an
site development were considered to be the
alternative access point to the current refineries
primary two categories as defined in the scope
producing Jet-A used at Sea-Tac Airport and the
of this study and received the highest weightings
Olympic Pipeline connecting the refineries to Seaof
40 and 25 percent, respectively. Community
Tac Airport.
acceptance was given the lowest score of 5
percent, while the remaining three categories were
given a weighting of 10 percent each.




38                                  Aviation Biofuels Infrastructure Feasibility Study

Table 6: Variable and Category Weightings for Short-Term Options
Multi-Modal Delivery Point Access                   Site Development and Costs
Olympic Pipeline  Main Pipeline                   0.0%          Short-Term/Initial Capacity                       15.0%
Olympic Pipeline  Sea-Tac Airport Spur Line        0.0%          Long-Term/Buildout Capacity                     30.0%
Barge/Vessel Offload Facility                       0.0%          Development Timeline                           10.0%
Estimate of Project Costs Per Annual Capacity
Rail Offload Facility                               0.0%                                                          35.0%
of Neat Biofuel
Truck Offload Facility                              0.0%          Financial Risk                                   10.0%
TOTAL SCORE                      0.0%       TOTAL SCORE                     30.0%

Environmental Constraints                          Community Acceptance
Wetlands Mitigation                             50.0%          Existing Interaction with Site Owner               25.0%
Flooding Risk                                   20.0%          Potential for Legal and Regulatory Challenges      25.0%
Seismic Risk                                    20.0%          Stakeholder Acceptance                         25.0%
Fire and Safety                                  10.0%          Public Acceptance                               25.0%
TOTAL SCORE                     10.0%       TOTAL SCORE                     10.0%

Permitting and Planning                            Contingency and Other
Ownership and Right-of-Way                    40.0%          Operational Costs                               30.0%
Current Zoning and Handling of Biofuels           40.0%          Supply Risk (events/contamination)               20.0%
Potential Permitting Issues                       10.0%          Supply Redundancy                             30.0%
Long-Range Site Planning                        10.0%          Future Operational Flexibility                     30.0%
TOTAL SCORE                     20.0%       TOTAL SCORE                     30.0%



Aviation Biofuels Infrastructure Feasibility Study                                    39

Table 7: Variable and Category Weightings for Long-Term Options
Multi-Modal Delivery Point Access                   Site Development and Costs
Olympic Pipeline  Main Pipeline                 30.0%          Short-Term Capacity Options                     15.0%
Olympic Pipeline  Sea-Tac Airport Spur Line      40.0%          Long-Term/Buildout Capacity Options             30.0%
Barge/Vessel Offload Facility                     15.0%          Development Timeline                           10.0%
Estimate of Project Costs Per Annual Capacity
Rail Offload Facility                              10.0%                                                          35.0%
of Neat Biofuel
Truck Offload Facility                              5.0%          Financial Risk                                   10.0%
TOTAL SCORE                     40.0%       TOTAL SCORE                     25.0%

Environmental Constraints                          Community Acceptance
Wetlands Mitigation                             50.0%          Existing Interaction with Site Owner               25.0%
Flooding Risk                                   20.0%          Potential for Legal and Regulatory Challenges      25.0%
Seismic Risk                                    20.0%          Stakeholder Acceptance                         25.0%
Fire and Safety                                  10.0%          Public Acceptance                               25.0%
TOTAL SCORE                     10.0%       TOTAL SCORE                      5.0%

Permitting and Planning                            Contingency and Other
Ownership and Right-of-Way                    40.0%          Operational Costs                               30.0%
Current Zoning and Handling of Biofuels           40.0%          Supply Risk (events/contamination)               20.0%
Potential Permitting Issues                       10.0%          Supply Redundancy                             20.0%
Long-Range Site Planning                        10.0%          Future Operational Flexibility                     30.0%
TOTAL SCORE                     10.0%       TOTAL SCORE                     10.0%



40                                  Aviation Biofuels Infrastructure Feasibility Study

5.10 Criteria Scorecard Results     The results for the long-term options comparison
favor the refinery site, Option 3, in every category
Based on the underlying analysis, scoring                 when compared to the improved Renton site with
methodology, and assumed weightings, the              blending capabilities, Option 2B, and full buildshort-term
options result in similar scores with             out of the Renton site to allow for rail shipments,
the Sea-Tac Airport Option 1A and the Renton            Option 2C.
Terminal Option 2A receiving a weighted score
of 3.8. Sea-Tac Airport Option 1B received a              The scorecard results are not intended to provide
slightly lower score of 3.7 due to a slightly higher          a specific recommendation on the preferred site
potential for wetlands mitigation and project delay         but are meant to provide input or an additional
risk because of the required construction of the           reference point to be used in the selection
SR 509 connector.                                     process.

Scorecard Results by Option and Primary Category for Short-Term Options

4.5
Contingency and Operational Risk
4.0
3.5                                                                     Community Acceptance
3.0                                                                     Site Development
2.5
Permitting and Planning
2.0
1.5                                                                     Environmental
Contingency and Operational Risk
Community Acceptance
1.0                                                                  Site DevelopmentLogistical Access
Permitting and Planning
0.5                                                                  Environmental
0.0                                                                  Logistical Access
1A                  1B                  2A
Sea-Tac Small Volume   Sea-Tac Small Volume   Renton Terminal Blended
Existing Roadway        SR 509 Connector        Supply Via Truck






Aviation Biofuels Infrastructure Feasibility Study                                    41

Scorecard Results by Option and Primary Category for Long-Term Options

4.5
Contingency and Operational Risk
4.0
3.5                                                                     Community Acceptance
3.0                                                                     Site Development
2.5
Permitting and Planning
2.0
1.5                                                                     Environmental
Contingency and Operational Risk
Community Acceptance
1.0                                                                  Site DevelopmentLogistical Access
Permitting and Planning
0.5                                                                  Environmental
0.0                                                                  Logistical Access
2B                 2C                  3
Renton Terminal Neat       Renton Terminal         Refinery Blending
Supply Via Truck and Blending    Supply Via Rail           Multiple Modes












42                                  Aviation Biofuels Infrastructure Feasibility Study

Table 8: Criteria Scorecard for Short-Term Options

Criteria Scorecard (1=low, 5=high)                     SHORT-TERM OPTIONS  IMPLEMENTATION WITHIN 18 MONTHS AND A MINIMUM OF 5 MILLION GALLONS OF STORAGE CAPACITY
1A  SEA-TAC SMALL VOLUME                   1B  SEA-TAC SMALL VOLUME                     2A  RENTON TERMINAL 
EXISTING ROADWAY                          SR 509 CONNECTOR                       BLENDED SUPPLY VIA TRUCK
Categories              Weighting              Description              Score              Description              Score              Description              Score
MULTI-MODAL DELIVERY POINT ACCESS
No access possible, input is upstream
Olympic Pipeline  Main Pipeline           0.0%     No access possible                    1.0     No access possible                    1.0                                       1.0
of Renton
Olympic Pipeline  Sea-Tac Spur Line        0.0%     Receipt only                         1.0     Receipt only                         1.0     Investment required for access           3.0

Barge/Vessel Offload Facility               0.0%     No access possible                    1.0     No access possible                    1.0     No access possible                    1.0

Rail Offload Facility                      0.0%     Significant investment required           2.0     Significant investment required           2.0     Significant investment required           2.0

Truck Offload Facility                    0.0%     Investment included in the cost estimate    5.0     Investment included in the cost estimate    5.0     Investment included in the cost estimate    5.0
Multi-Modal Delivery Point Access 
0.0%    Primarily Truck -     Primarily Truck -     Primarily Truck -
Total Score
ENVIRONMENTAL CONSTRAINTS
Potential requirement for some
Wetlands Mitigation                    50.0%     Improvements on existing land            5.0                                       4.0     Improvements on existing land            5.0
mitigation
Flooding Risk                         20.0%     Located in area at risk for flooding         3.0     Located in area at risk for flooding         3.0     Located in a floodplain                  2.0

Seismic Risk                         20.0%     Moderate slope instability               3.0     Moderate slope instability               3.0     Steep slopes and areas of liquefaction      2.0
Existing on-site fire station and                   Existing on-site fire station and
Fire and Safety                        10.0%                                       5.0                                       5.0     Established emergency procedures        4.0
emergency procedures                         emergency procedures
Environmental  Total Score            10.0%     Low risk                           4.2     Moderate risk                       3.7     Moderate risk                       3.7
PERMITTING AND PLANNING
Owned by Phillips 66 with some
Ownership and Right-of-Way             40.0%     Port-owned property                   5.0     Port-owned property                   5.0                                       4.0
available land for improvements
Handle conventional jet and biofuel test             Handle conventional jet and biofuel test
Current Zoning and Handling of Biofuels     40.0%                                       4.0                                       4.0     Currently handles ethanol and biodiesel     5.0
volumes                                   volumes
Potential Permitting Issues               10.0%     Existing fuel storage site                5.0     Existing fuel storage site                5.0     Existing fuel storage site                5.0
Potential land available, requires
Long-Range Site Planning                10.0%     Limited potential for site expansion        2.0     Limited potential for site expansion        2.0                                       3.0
mitigation
Permitting and Planning  Total Score     10.0%     Port-owned property                  4.3    Port-owned property                   4.3     Oil products terminal                  4.4
SITE DEVELOPMENT AND COSTS
Up to 5 M gallons/year neat biofuel                Up to 5 M gallons/year neat biofuel                Up to 14.3 M gallons/year neat biofuel
Short-Term/Initial Capacity               15.0%                                       5.0                                       5.0                                       5.0
(80/20 blend)                                (80/20 blend)                                (80/20 blend)
Up to 5 M gallons/year neat biofuel                Up to 5 M gallons/year neat biofuel                Up to 14.3 M gallons/year neat biofuel
Long-Term/Buildout Capacity             30.0%                                       1.0                                       1.0                                       1.0
(80/20 blend)                                (80/20 blend)                                (80/20 blend)
Development Timeline                  10.0%     1218 months                       5.0     1218 months                       5.0     1218 months                       5.0
Estimate of Project Costs Per Annual                                                                                                     $0.20 per gallon, does not include off-
35.0%     $2.79 per gallon                      2.0     $2.34 per gallon                      2.0                                       2.0
Capacity of Neat Biofuel                                                                                                              site blending costs
Low risk, minimal improvements,
Financial Risk                        10.0%     Low risk  Port-owned                 5.0     Low financial risk, some delay risk         4.0                                       5.0
existing terminal site
Site Development  Total Score          30.0%     Short-term, low risk                  2.8     Short-term, low risk                  2.7     Short-term, low risk                  2.8
COMMUNITY ACCEPTANCE
Potential conflicting needs for available             Potential conflicting needs for available             No existing relationship with Phillips 66
Existing Interaction with Site Owner        25.0%                                       4.0                                       4.0                                       3.0
space                                     space                                     on conventional jet fuel supply
Potential for Legal and Regulatory
25.0%     Low  Port-owned site                 5.0     Low  Port-owned site                 5.0     Low  Minimal site investment            5.0
Challenges
Competing demands/priorities for airport            Competing demands/priorities for airport            Phillips 66 has indicated a strong
Stakeholder Acceptance                 25.0%                                       3.0                                       4.0                                       5.0
land, and roadway congestion                    land                                      interest in participation
Potential challenges to public agency              Potential challenges to public agency              Limited potential for public challenges
Public Acceptance                     25.0%                                       4.0                                       4.0                                       4.0
involvement in integrated fuel supply              involvement in integrated fuel supply              given current operations
Community Acceptance  Total Score     10.0%     Low risk for challenges                4.0     Very low risk for challenges            4.3     Very low risk for challenges            4.3







Aviation Biofuels Infrastructure Feasibility Study                                                           43

Table 8: Criteria Scorecard for Short-Term Options (Cont'd)

Criteria Scorecard (1=low, 5=high)                     SHORT-TERM OPTIONS  IMPLEMENTATION WITHIN 18 MONTHS AND A MINIMUM OF 5 MILLION GALLONS OF STORAGE CAPACITY
1A  SEA-TAC SMALL VOLUME                   1B  SEA-TAC SMALL VOLUME                     2A  RENTON TERMINAL 
EXISTING ROADWAY                          SR 509 CONNECTOR                       BLENDED SUPPLY VIA TRUCK
Categories              Weighting              Description              Score              Description              Score              Description              Score
CONTINGENCY AND OTHER
Future price risk if operations are
Operational Costs                      30.0%     Fuel Consortium/Swissport              5.0     Fuel Consortium/Swissport              5.0                                       3.0
contracted out to Phillips 66
Risk of contamination through multiple
Supply Risk (events/contamination)         20.0%     Limited risk for supply contamination       5.0     Limited risk for supply contamination       5.0                                       3.0
contact points, pipeline leaks
Enhance direct delivery to airport fuel              Enhance direct delivery to airport fuel              Provides new access point for jet
Supply Redundancy                    20.0%                                       3.0                                       3.0                                       4.0
farm                                      farm                                      delivery
No real advantage to the port if decision
Infrastructure could be used for                  Infrastructure could be used for
Future Operational Flexibility              30.0%                                       5.0                                       5.0     to transition to higher volume refiner site    2.0
conventional jet storage                        conventional jet storage
in the future
Contingency and Other  Total Score      30.0%     Limited risk                         4.2     Limited risk                         4.2     Some operational risk                 3.2

TOTAL SCORE
Multi-Modal Delivery Point Access 
0.0%     Primarily Truck -     Primarily Truck -     Primarily Truck -
Total Score
Environmental  Total Score              10.0%     Low risk                            4.2     Moderate risk                        3.7     Moderate risk                        3.7

Permitting and Planning  Total Score       20.0%     Port-owned property                   4.3     Port-owned property                   4.3     Oil products terminal                   4.4

Site Development  Total Score            30.0%     Short-term, low risk                   2.8     Short-term, low risk                   2.7     Short-term, low risk                   2.8

Community Acceptance  Total Score       10.0%     Low risk for challenges                 4.0     Very low risk for challenges              4.3     Very low risk for challenges              4.3

Contingency and Other  Total Score        30.0%     Limited risk                          4.2     Limited risk                          4.2     Some operational risk                  3.2

Total Weighted Average Score           100.0%     Average Overall Score                 3.8     Average Overall Score                 3.7     Average Overall Score                 3.4























44                                                      Aviation Biofuels Infrastructure Feasibility Study

Table 9: Criteria Scorecard for Long-Term Options

Criteria Scorecard (1=low, 5=high)                    TRANSITION FOR OPTION 2                                LONG-TERM OPTIONS  MULTIPLE SUPPLY OPTIONS
2B  RENTON TERMINAL                       2C  RENTON TERMINAL
3  REFINERY BLENDING MULTIPLE MODES
NEAT SUPPLY VIA TRUCK AND BLENDING                    SUPPLY VIA RAIL
Categories              Weighting              Description              Score              Description              Score              Description              Score
MULTI-MODAL DELIVERY POINT ACCESS
No access possible, input is upstream              No access possible, input is upstream
Olympic Pipeline  Main Pipeline           30.0%                                       1.0                                       1.0     Existing access point                   4.0
of Renton                                   of Renton
Full integration with Main Olympic
Olympic Pipeline  Sea-Tac Spur Line       40.0%     Investment required for access           3.0     Investment required for access           3.0                                       5.0
Pipeline
Barge/Vessel Offload Facility              15.0%     No access possible                    1.0     No access possible                    1.0     Investment included in the cost estimate    5.0

Rail Offload Facility                     10.0%     Significant investment required           2.0     Investment included in the cost estimate    5.0     Investment included in the cost estimate    5.0
Current capacity assumed to be
Truck Offload Facility                    5.0%     Investment included in the cost estimate    5.0                                       4.0     Investment included in the cost estimate    5.0
adequate, may require some upgrades
Multi-Modal Delivery Point Access 
40.0%     Primary Truck                       2.1     Primary Rail                        2.4     Primary Pipeline                     4.7
Total Score
ENVIRONMENTAL CONSTRAINTS
Improvement on existing land with some
Wetlands Mitigation                    50.0%     Moderate mitigation required             3.0     Significant mitigation likely required        2.0                                       4.0
mitigation possible
Site dependent but all three refineries
Flooding Risk                         20.0%     Located in a floodplain                  2.0     Located in a floodplain                  2.0                                       4.0
have invested in mitigation
Some sites may have areas of moderate
Seismic Risk                         20.0%     Steep slopes and areas of liquefaction      2.0     Steep slopes and areas of liquefaction      2.0                                       4.0
slope instability
On-site emergency equipment and
Fire and Safety                        10.0%     Established emergency procedures        4.0     Established emergency procedures        4.0                                       5.0
established emergency procedures
Environmental  Total Score            10.0%     Moderate-High Risk                  2.7    High risk                            2.2     Moderate risk                       4.1
PERMITTING AND PLANNING
Owned by Phillips 66 with some                  Owned by Phillips 66, significant right-             Three existing sites owned by different
Ownership and Right-of-Way             40.0%                                       4.0                                       2.0                                       4.0
available land for improvements                  of-way acquisition required for rail spur            refiners
Current Zoning and Handling of Biofuels     40.0%     Currently handles ethanol and biodiesel     5.0     Currently handles ethanol and biodiesel     5.0     Currently handles ethanol and biodiesel     5.0
Developed area and commercial zoning
Existing fuel storage site, may require
Potential Permitting Issues               10.0%                                       3.0     would need to be repurposed and         2.0     Existing fuel production and storage site     5.0
approval for expansion
rezoned for rail spur
Potential land available, requires                  Potential land available, requires
Long-Range Site Planning                10.0%                                       3.0                                       2.0     Land available for further expansion        5.0
mitigation                                  mitigation and further acquisition
Permitting and Planning  Total Score     10.0%     Oil products terminal                  4.2    Oil products terminal                   3.2     Refinery site                        4.6
SITE DEVELOPMENT AND COSTS
Up to 71.5 M gallons/year neat biofuel             Up to 82.7 M gallons/year neat biofuel             Up to 100+ M gallons/year neat biofuel
Short-Term Capacity Options             15.0%                                       5.0                                       5.0                                       2.0
(80/20 blend)                                (80/20 blend)                                (80/20 blend)
Up to 71.5 M gallons/year neat biofuel             Up to 82.7 M gallons/year neat biofuel             Up to 100+ M gallons/year neat biofuel
Long-Term/Buildout Capacity Options       30.0%                                       2.0                                       4.0                                       5.0
(80/20 blend)                                (80/20 blend)                                (80/20 blend)
Development Timeline                  10.0%     24 months                          4.0     6072 months                       3.0     2430 months                       5.0
Estimate of Project Costs Per Annual
35.0%     $1.19 per gallon                      4.0     $2.03 per gallon                      3.0     $1.04 per gallon                      4.0
Capacity of Neat Biofuel
Significant risk due to right-of-                   Moderate risk due to project size,
Moderate risk, wetlands mitigation,
Financial Risk                        10.0%                                       3.0     way acquisition, local opposition,          2.0     mitigated by site location at existing        3.0
legal/environmental challenges
infrastructure complexity                       production and storage facility
Site Development  Total Score          25.0%     Mid-term, moderate risk               3.5     Long-term, high risk                  3.5     Long-term, moderate risk              4.0
COMMUNITY ACCEPTANCE
Potential for reduction in economies
No existing relationship with Phillips 66             No existing relationship with Phillips 66
Existing Interaction with Site Owner        25.0%                                       3.0                                       3.0     of scale if more than one refinery          3.0
on conventional jet fuel supply                   on conventional jet fuel supply
partiicipates
Low  Site already zoned for refining
Potential for Legal and Regulatory                                                             Medium  Requires improvements and
25.0%     Low  Minimal site investment            5.0                                       3.0     and petroleum product storage, potential    4.0
Challenges                                                                              rezoning near property being developed
for future restrictions on rail movements
Phillips 66 has indicated a strong                 Phillips 66 has indicated a strong                 High probability that one or more
interest in participation, challenges                interest in participation, challenges in              refiners will be interested in storing and
Stakeholder Acceptance                 25.0%                                       4.0                                       3.0                                       4.0
in wetlands mitigation for storage                 wetlands mitigation and rail spur land              blending aviation biofuels to maintain
expansion                                  acquisition for storage expansion                 market share
Strong potential for public challenges
Potential public challenges to expansion                                                      Limited potential for public challenges
to rail expansion for the movement of
Public Acceptance                     25.0%     of an industrial site in an area switching     4.0                                       2.0     to site development and associated        5.0
oil product tankers in close proximity to
from industrial to commercial activity                                                        infrastrucutre investments
commerical office buildings
Community Acceptance  Total Score      5.0%     Low risk for challenges                4.0     High risk for challenges               2.8     Low risk for challenges                4.0




Aviation Biofuels Infrastructure Feasibility Study                                                           45

Table 9: Criteria Scorecard for Long-Term Options (Cont'd)

Criteria Scorecard (1=low, 5=high)                    TRANSITION FOR OPTION 2                                LONG-TERM OPTIONS  MULTIPLE SUPPLY OPTIONS
2B  RENTON TERMINAL                       2C  RENTON TERMINAL
3  REFINERY BLENDING MULTIPLE MODES
NEAT SUPPLY VIA TRUCK AND BLENDING                    SUPPLY VIA RAIL
Categories              Weighting              Description              Score              Description              Score              Description              Score
CONTINGENCY AND OTHER
Future price risk if operations are                 Future price risk if operations are                 Future price risk if operations are
Operational Costs                      25.0%                                       3.0                                       3.0                                       3.0
contracted out to Phillips 66                     contracted out to Phillips 66                     contracted out to refiners
Increased risk of pipeline leak on
Risk of contamination through multiple             Supply risk for rail and truck, multiple
Supply Risk (events/contamination)         25.0%                                       3.0                                       2.0     Olympic and supply risk (rail/vessel/        2.0
contact points, pipeline leaks                    handling
truck), multiple handling
Provides new access point and
Provides new access point for jet                                                           Uses existing input and pipeline, limited
Supply Redundancy                    25.0%                                       4.0     transportation modes for jet delivery and    5.0                                       2.0
delivery and storage                                                                    redundency improvements
storage
No real advantage to the Port if decision            No real advantage to the Port if decision            Limited benefit to Port but provides
Future Operational Flexibility              25.0%     to transition to higher volume refiner site    2.0     to transition to higher volume refiner site    2.0     additional capacity to the refiner for        2.0
in the future                                 in the future                                 future use
Contingency and Other  Total Score      10.0%     Some operational risk                 3.0     Some operational risk                 3.0     Higher operational risk                2.3

TOTAL SCORE
Multi-Modal Delivery Point Access 
40.0%     Primary Truck                        2.1     Primary Rail                         2.4     Primary Pipeline                      4.7
Total Score
Environmental  Total Score              10.0%     Moderate-High Risk                    2.7     High risk                            2.2     Moderate risk                        4.1

Permitting and Planning  Total Score       10.0%     Oil products terminal                   4.2     Oil products terminal                   3.2     Refinery site                         4.6

Site Development  Total Score            25.0%     Mid-term, moderate risk                3.5     Long-term, high risk                   3.5     Long-term, moderate risk               4.0

Community Acceptance  Total Score        5.0%     Low risk for challenges                 4.0     High risk for challenges                 2.8     Low risk for challenges                 4.0

Contingency and Other  Total Score        10.0%     Some operational risk                  3.0     Some operational risk                  3.0     Higher operational risk                  2.3

Total Weighted Average Score           100.0%     Average Overall Score                 2.9     Low Overall Score                    2.8     High Overall Score                    4.2






















46                                                      Aviation Biofuels Infrastructure Feasibility Study

6 Key Findings
The objective of this study was to identify the best approach to
deliver up to 50 million gallons (and to double to 100 million after
2025) of aviation biofuel per year into the fuel hydrant delivery
system at Sea-Tac International Airport. A total of 29 sites across
the state were identified and screened. The sites were located in
King, Pierce, Whatcom, Skagit, Grays Harbor and Franklin Counties,
Washington.
The original 29 sites were narrowed to six locations based on a
number of criteria, such as access to fuel transportation modes
(pipeline, rail, marine and truck), zoning, wetlands and other
environmental considerations, etc. The application of additional
criteria, including infrastructure development costs, focused the
analysis to the three properties best suited to meet project goals.
Conceptual infrastructure development improvements and costs
were developed for a total of six options for the three sites, and
a feasibility evaluation scorecard was completed to compare the
six options.

The key findings of the study are         The Phillips 66/Olympic Pipeline Company
the following:                             sites in Renton also showed potential to
accommodate receipt and blending facilities
Identifying a biofuel supply source was not                  for moderate-to-large biofuel volumes over the
a part of this study. Without a long-term                   long term.
supply source or agreement in place for
The study sponsors received a very positive
aviation biofuels, it would be prudent to focus
reception from the Olympic Pipeline Company,
short-term investments on smaller scale
the petroleum refineries and distributors. These
facilities that are flexible and could support
fuel supply and transport organizations showed
other aviation fuel supply uses.
strong interest in upgrading their facilities to
Infrastructure requirements for fuel offloading               handle aviation biofuel and moving the blended
from rail and marine modes are high in cost, so           product in their pipelines.
these facilities are only cost-effective for large
As the biofuel supply expands, the Port of
volumes of biofuel over the long term.
Seattle, its partners, and the fuel supply
A small biofuel receiving and blending facility               and transport organizations could work
at the Sea-Tac Airport Fuel Farm is the most              cooperatively toward the ultimate goal
cost-effective solution in the short term. In                 of integrating aviation biofuel into the
addition, this facility would fulfill an existing                 fuel hydrant delivery system at Sea-Tac
critical need for additional local fuel receipt and            International Airport.
offloading infrastructure that is not dependent
on the Olympic Pipeline.
The north-end refineries are the most costeffective
options for receipt and blending of
large volumes of aviation biofuel over the long
term due to their access to marine, rail, truck,
and the Olympic Pipeline. In this study, Tesoro
Anacortes was used as a proxy for any of the
three refineries that currently produce Jet-A
fuel in Whatcom and Skagit Counties. This
conclusion should be re-evaluated in the future
when a large-scale producer of neat biofuel
is identified.









48                                  Aviation Biofuels Infrastructure Feasibility Study


P-00318568   I   Aviation Biofuels Infrastructure Feasibility Study   I   November 2016

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