Poster's note: potentially of interest to air capture types. Cynics may
claim that this is simply an expensive piece of subsidized greenwash for
the fossil fuels industry - and one that's being used partially to extract
even more fossil fuels via EOR.

http://www.nbcnews.com/science/environment/clean-coal-carbon-capture-debuts-north-america-not-u-s-n218221

'Clean Coal' With Carbon Capture Debuts in North America (Not in U.S.)

BY JOHN ROACH

A first-of-its-kind coal-fired power plant retrofitted with technology to
capture and store most of the carbon dioxide produced at one of its boilers
officially began operations this week in Saskatchewan, Canada. Meanwhile, a
similar project in Illinois to demonstrate a cleaner way to burn the
world's most abundant fossil fuel remains in legal and financial
limbo.Whether the U.S. government-backed project in Meredosia, Ill., will
advance so-called carbon capture and storage, or CCS, technology is an open
question, but experts deem the technology itself vital if the world hopes
to stand any practical chance at staving off catastrophic climate
change.advertisement

And CCS is being propelled forward by pollution-control measures such as
the Obama admnistration's proposed rules to limit carbon emissions from new
and existing power plants.

"The reason that you want to look at CCS is the math," John Thompson, the
director of the Fossil Transition Project at the Clean Air Task Force, a
nonprofit that advocates for low-carbon energy technologies, explained to
NBC News.

About two-thirds of the roughly 30 gigatons of carbon dioxide released by
human activity each year comes from the power sector and industrial
activities such as oil refining and fertilizer production. These activities
are all "amenable to carbon capture and storage," Thompson said. "In fact,
you can capture 90 percent of the CO2 from any one of those particular
sources."

'Great bumper sticker'

While increased use of nuclear, solar and wind power could replace some
coal, gas and oil-fired power plants, they are not an option for most
industrial sources of carbon dioxide, he added. "Eliminating fossil fuels
is a great bumper sticker," he said. "It is an ineffective climate
solution."

To boot, global greenhouse gas "emissions are higher than they have ever
been and we are building more coal plants every year,"

Steven Davis, an earth systems scientist at the University of California,
Irvine, told NBC News.In fact, current emission and construction trends
suggest that the international goal to limit warming to 3.6 degrees
Fahrenheit is "completely implausible," he said during a presentation of
his research at a recentclimate conference in Seattle. Getting anywhere
close to the goal, he added in a follow-up interview, will almost certainly
require massive deployment of solar and nuclear power along with CCS."But
there is a big cost associated with CCS," he noted. "It is like 40 or 50
percent more expensive to get energy from a fossil plant if it has CCS."

How CCS works

Carbon capture and storage is a basket of technologies used to prevent
carbon dioxide from escaping to the atmosphere in the course of power
generation and other industrial activities. The captured gas is typically
injected deep underground where, in theory, it will stay forever. In some
cases, this injected gas is used to force out remnant oil from underground
deposits, a process known as enhanced oil recovery."

It is a natural next step especially for the fossil fuel industry which
sees value in CCS because it means we can continue to keep burning their
products," Davis said.

The Boundary Dam Power Station, owned by SaskPower, is near Estevan,
Saskatchewan. The world's first commercial-scale carbon capture and storage
project officially opened there this week.

The carbon capture approach used at SaskPower's newly retrofitted Boundary
Dam Power Plant in Saskatchewan removes the carbon dioxide with a chemical
solution after the coal is burned to generate electricity. The captured gas
will be used for enhanced oil recovery; some will be stored 2.1 miles deep
in the Earth in a layer of brine-filled sandstone.

A second method called coal gasification employs heat and pressure to
convert coal into gas before it is burned, easing the removal of carbon
dioxide. A Southern Company power plant under construction in Kemper
County, Miss., due to come online in 2015 uses this approach. The captured
carbon dioxide will be shipped via pipeline to nearby oil fields.The
project in Meredosia, Ill., is backed by a $1 billion federal stimulus
grant and aims to demonstrate a technology known as oxy-combustion, where
the coal is burned in oxygen and carbon dioxide instead of air to produce a
concentrated stream of carbon dioxide for transportation and storage in
saline rock deep underground.

FutureGen delays

That Illinois project, known as FutureGen 2.0, will retrofit and restart a
boiler at a retired coal-fired power plant. It is the second iteration of a
demonstration project originally conceived under the George W. Bush
administration in 2003. The original project was scrapped due to cost
overruns.The scaled-back version also faces financial hurdles, including
efforts to secure $650 million in private sector financing that have been
hindered by a legal challenge from the Sierra Club, which opposes coal
plant construction, according to MIT Technology Review.advertisement

NBCNEWS.COM  "The lawsuit is really about the integrity of the permitting
process," Eva Schueller, an attorney for the Sierra Club, told NBC News.
The current permit, she explained, will allow the project backers to
operate the refurbished plant as a traditional coal plant without limits on
the amount of carbon it can release into the atmosphere.

The environmental group and the project backers are working together "to
resolve issues related to the air permit," Lawrence Pacheco, a spokesman
for the FutureGen Alliance, told NBC News in an email. Meanwhile, he added,
the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency recently issued the project an
underground storage permit for carbon dioxide and limited construction has
begun at the plant.

'The world changes'

Thompson with the Clean Air Task Force holds a dim view on the FutureGen
2.0 project, which he noted even if built would demonstrate a "third-tier"
approach to carbon capture that is unlikely to gain mass market traction.

Nevertheless, he is optimistic about the future of carbon capture and
storage technology. "I see a series of projects breaking ground or going
into operation that for the first time actually capture CO2 from these
power sources and once that happens I think the world changes," he said.

The caveats, noted Davis, concern the high price tag for energy generated
with the technology as well as the new infrastructure required to do it.
For example, his rough calculations suggest that to capture and store just
10 percent of global carbon dioxide emissions would require the same amount
of pipelines and pumping infrastructure that already exist for the oil
industry."

It is not technologically impossible," he said, "but some people might hear
that and say there is no way we are going to do it."

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