| Coal use set to increase in the global energy 
    mix   May 01, 2008 -- Datamonitor
 A combination of strong demand, record oil and gas prices, concerns over 
    energy security and a reluctance to recommit to nuclear energy, has seen a 
    renaissance of coal in the European energy mix. This is a trend closely 
    mirrored in the US and Asia. However, while coal might help to fill growing 
    energy security gaps, it raises some profound environmental questions.
 
 No less than 50 coal-fired plants have been slated for construction over the 
    next five years in the EU alone, while India and China are currently 
    constructing a new coal-fired plant every week. Coal is also continuing to 
    gather momentum in the US; 150 proposals for coal-fired plants were put 
    forward in 2007, most of which are likely to gain permits.
 
 The fact that coal is becoming more prominent in the generation mix should, 
    however, come as little surprise. The International Energy Agency has long 
    projected a rise in coal usage based on energy security grounds. Indeed, 
    there are 200 years worth of coal reserves in geographically dispersed 
    areas, with deposits evenly distributed between the US (27%), Russia (17%), 
    China (13%) and India (10%). Latest estimates suggest that coal will account 
    for 27% of the global generation mix by 2030, up from the 24% that it holds 
    today. Coal also accounts for 60% of global energy resources.
 
 Given the abundance of resources and coal's geographical spread across 
    politically accessible states, a number of countries are starting to see the 
    fuel as the only viable option to alleviate energy security concerns. In 
    effect, coal allows countries to place a reasonably stable and predictable 
    egg into supply side baskets. Within the EU, Poland still relies on coal for 
    around 90% of its generation mix, followed by the Czech Republic (65%), 
    Greece (62%) and Germany, (around 50%). That said, like its liquid relation 
    (in the form of oil), coal prices are beginning to increase. Coal has seen a 
    threefold price increase over the past few years, driven by supply 
    disruptions in producer states such as South Africa. However, rather than 
    pushing investors away from carbon-based fuels and towards other forms of 
    energy production such as renewables; as yet, the core result has been to 
    bring previously uneconomic sites across Europe and the US back into 
    consideration.
 
 Environmental concerns
 
 However, despite coal's advantages when it comes to energy security, the 
    fuel has numerous disadvantages in relation to climate change. Coal remains 
    the dirtiest carbon-based fuel, already accounting for 40% of global 
    emissions. With coal forming a core part of the next European, US and Asian 
    investment cycle, this places a major premium on developing carbon 
    mitigation strategies, such as clean coal technology and carbon capture and 
    storage (CCS). So far, the signs do not bode well; CCS is not yet 
    technically or commercially viable.
 
 Although there are a number of small demonstration CCS projects in Europe 
    and the US at early stages, most have either failed to make progress or face 
    crippling cost overruns. In January 2008, Washington cancelled the US's 
    largest CCS demonstration project in Illinois on a cost basis. A number of 
    European projects are hitting similar problems.
 
 Nevertheless, the greatest environmental concern is that new coal-fired 
    plants are being built every week in India and China, most of which are not 
    constructed in a way that is amenable to CCS. The same problem is also 
    cropping up closer to home. Adaptable plants cost around 10-20% more to 
    build than conventional plants, with only a handful of such plants in 
    existence today in Europe. For most coal-fired plants, the costs of 
    converting would be extremely high, perhaps too high even once an implied 
    price for carbon is factored in.
 
 An additional problem is where the carbon would actually be stored. 
    Geologists have warned that the number of sites that could be considered 
    safe for storage are limited, and have even gone as far as to warn that 
    carbon storage could, potentially, be just as dangerous as trying to store 
    nuclear waste.
 
 This is not to say that greater investment in clean technologies will not be 
    forthcoming as coal usage increases. However, at this stage, there remains a 
    blunt trade-off between security of supply and greenhouse gas emissions. 
    Indeed, what plays well for one, does not always play well for the other. 
    Given the perilous warnings voiced by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate 
    Change (IPCC) regarding the need to tackle climate change by 2020, the need 
    for new technology to be both developed and dispersed is crucial if the 
    black stuff is to be turned green.
 
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