US Hopes for Coal Gasification Ride on One Project
US: October 23, 2007
HOUSTON - Much talked-about US efforts to build a coal-fired power plant
with near zero emissions are now concentrated in a single project, as the
costs and difficulties of the endeavor have mounted and the stakes have
risen.
FutureGen, a US$1.5 billion public-private venture, aims to design and test
the technology required to turn coal into a gas that can be stripped of
harmful emissions, then burned to produce electricity and hydrogen. It will
also capture carbon dioxide -- widely blamed for global warming -- and store
it underground forever.
Plants that burn coal, already used to produce half the electricity consumed
in the United States, were poised to make a major comeback after a decade of
construction of less-polluting, natural gas-fired units. Dirtier coal
regained its luster as a cheap power-plant fuel after gas prices soared in
2005 following two hurricanes that disrupted US supply.
But increased worry about climate change and the potential for new laws to
tax carbon emissions have created a backlash against new coal plants, which
account for nearly 40 percent of all US carbon dioxide emissions.
While China and India continue to pursue construction of traditional
coal-fired plants, US regulators and utilities this year in Texas, Florida,
Oklahoma, Minnesota and Kansas have backed off plans for a dozen new
coal-fired plants, citing high costs and regulatory uncertainty about carbon
emissions.
Earlier this month, Tampa, Florida-based TECO Energy said its utility
dropped plans to build a long-awaited advanced clean-coal plant. While
utility executives said they will continue to look for new ways to use coal,
the project was too risky at the current time.
The growing risk associated with coal use increases the pressure on
FutureGen to succeed.
"For those still in the process of coming to the realization of the
importance of the global warming threat, FutureGen may be more important
than it seemed a couple of years ago," said Scott Anderson, senior policy
adviser for climate and air programs at Environmental Defense in Texas.
The FutureGen alliance includes US utilities and coal producers like
American Electric Power Co and Peabody Energy along with international
miners Anglo American BHP Billiton and China's largest coal-based power
company, China Huaneng Group.
The US Department of Energy and the industrial alliance have been planning
FutureGen since 2003. A decision on which of four finalist sites -- two in
Texas and two in Illinois -- will become FutureGen's home is expected in
December.
THORNY ISSUES
Coal gasification technology uses heat and pressure to convert coal or any
carbon material into a synthetic gas which is burned in a turbine to
generate electricity. Hot gas leaving the turbine is used to heat water to
produce steam to power a steam turbine and generate more power.
The technology allows for the separation of the pollutants currently
regulated in the United States -- nitrogen oxide, sulfur dioxide and mercury
-- from the gas before burning it. Carbon dioxide can also be separated.
While gasification is fairly well understood, technical and legal aspects of
carbon storage present the thorniest issues for FutureGen, said Jerry
Oliver, senior vice president of the alliance.
Putting carbon dioxide underground permanently "has never been done before,"
Oliver said. "There's no precedent."
So far, FutureGen has spent about US$50 million, mostly focusing on the
behavior of carbon at specific geographic sites under consideration, said a
spokesman.
Oliver recently met with state officials to follow up on the competing site
proposals which promise millions of dollars in grants, tax incentives, power
purchase guarantees and liability protection for stored carbon.
When operational in 2012, technology developed by FutureGen could help
transform the nation's plentiful supply of coal into a friendly and
affordable fuel to meet growing demand for electricity. But success of the
project will not be quick or cheap, said Lawrence Makovich, a vice president
with Cambridge Energy Research Associates.
"Reducing carbon in electric production is a very big challenge and it's
something that is going to be very expensive," Makovich said.
"That's why there is so much government involvement and subsidy," he said.
"It's a very important piece of R&D that's moving forward."
Pieces of the technology are in use or being tested around the world, but no
single project combines the processes needed to operate a coal gasification
plant and to store carbon permanently at a commercial scale and an
economical price, Makovich said.
When FutureGen was proposed, "there were going to be all kinds of projects
that were going to do this," said Oliver. "But none of them are going
forward."
Story by Eileen O'Grady
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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