Lethbridge Herald

Cost main hurdle of ‘clean coal’

- Michael Virtanen

Technology now in limited use removes about 90 per cent of carbon dioxide from the smokestack­s of coal-fired power plants, but energy experts say cost remains the chief obstacle to bringing the “clean coal” touted by President Donald Trump into the mainstream.

They cite recent advances in applying the longstandi­ng technology, despite some earlier setbacks, but say the U.S. power sector needs bigger tax credits or other incentives to close the cost gap for using them.

“What we have now is a public policy challenge, or call it a political challenge if you will, in that next phase which is to deploy this technology more widely and bring the cost down, (which) requires a whole new set of policies that go beyond R&D to actual deployment incentives,” said Brad Crabtree, vice-president for fossil fuels at the Great Plains Institute.

The U.S. has successful­ly cut other smokestack pollutants, including sulfur, nitrogen and mercury. But carbon dioxide is a bigger challenge because there is so much of it. Coal- and gas-fired electrical generators produce about 30 per cent of CO2 from human activity. Other industries like cement, steel and fertilizer manufactur­ing add another 20 to 25 per cent. Farming and vehicles are also major contributo­rs.

John Thompson of the nonprofit Clean Air Task Force said there would be no way to limit the rise in global temperatur­es to 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) above pre-industrial levels without taming carbon emissions. The world has already warmed about 1.1 degrees Celsius (2 degrees Fahrenheit) since the Industrial Revolution. Scientists say every fraction of a degree change in average temperatur­es can lead to noticeable swings in local weather patterns.

“If you don’t tackle that you really can’t constrain warming on the planet to one-and-a-half to two degrees on anybody’s likely scenarios,” he said.

In Congress, bills that now have 64 bipartisan sponsors would raise carbon-capture tax credits from $10 or $20 per metric ton depending on use to $35 or $50. Advocates want it added to the current tax overhaul proposal.

Sen. Shelley Moore Capito, a West Virginia Republican and cosponsor, said carbon capture would help protect the coal industry and expand oil production as well as reduce emissions. As for chances of passage, she said Thursday that it’s “too early in the process to know whether those priorities can advance together or separately.”

The Natural Resources Defence Council, like other environmen­tal groups, first advocates efficient energy use and switching to renewable sources, but regards carbon capture as “a potentiall­y useful tool in the climate protection toolbox,” said David Hawkins, director of climate programs.

At federal labs in Morgantown and Pittsburgh, researcher­s cite one recently successful 13megawatt pilot project in Colorado and say they are on target for a handful of others by 2020 while reducing the cost of carbon capture from $100 per metric ton to $40. “We’re definitely close,” said Lynn Brickett, the labs’ carbon capture technology manager.

The labs are also identifyin­g methods to inject more liquefied carbon dioxide back into the Earth. That’s where the carbonbase­d coal, oil and natural gas originally came from before they were burned and produced the CO2 in the atmosphere blamed for global warming.

New energy technologi­es normally take 15 years to move from the laboratory to the outside world, according to the National Energy Technology Laboratory. Its researcher­s are developing computer models to accelerate that timeline for carbon, engineer David Miller said.

The lab, a division of the U.S. Energy Department, acknowledg­es routine use would be at least another decade away and historical­ly such advances have taken 20 to 30 years. Meanwhile, more U.S. coal-fired power plants are scheduled to close.

In June, Mississipp­i Power Co. suspended special carboncapt­ure efforts at its 582megawat­t Mississipp­i power plant that first turned coal into gas, which cost more than $7 billion to build, more than double the planned cost. Once regarded as a possible model for “clean coal,” it now burns natural gas.

The Petra Nova project outside Houston used a $190-million federal grant toward installing a $1-billion system to capture CO2 from an existing 600-megawatt coal-fired power plant, piping it to a Texas oil field and pumping it undergroun­d to boost oil production. Operating since late December, the system is currently “breaking even,” NRG Energy spokesman David Knox said.

 ?? Associated Press photo ?? In this June 3 file photo, the coal-fired Plant Scherer, one of the nation's top carbon dioxide emitters, stands in the distance in Juliette, Ga. Technology now in limited use removes about 90 per cent of carbon dioxide from the smokestack­s of...
Associated Press photo In this June 3 file photo, the coal-fired Plant Scherer, one of the nation's top carbon dioxide emitters, stands in the distance in Juliette, Ga. Technology now in limited use removes about 90 per cent of carbon dioxide from the smokestack­s of...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada