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The Role of Coal Generation in a World of Greenhouse Gas Regulation

The Role of Coal Generation in a World of Greenhouse Gas Regulation. NARUC Summer Meeting Howard Herzog MIT July 17, 2007. Coal Today. Coal is relatively cheap and abundant

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The Role of Coal Generation in a World of Greenhouse Gas Regulation

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  1. The Role of Coal Generation in a World of Greenhouse Gas Regulation NARUC Summer Meeting Howard Herzog MIT July 17, 2007 Howard Herzog / MIT Laboratory for Energy and the Environment

  2. Coal Today • Coal is relatively cheap and abundant • Criteria pollutant targets (SOx, NOx, particulates, Hg) can be met at reasonable costs through at least 2020 and probably well beyond • Over 50% of US electricity demand met by coal Howard Herzog / MIT Laboratory for Energy and the Environment

  3. Coal from the Climate Change Perspective Howard Herzog / MIT Laboratory for Energy and the Environment

  4. MIT Coal StudyOverview • Follow-on to The Future of Nuclear Power • On web at mit.edu/nuclearpower • Full report released March 14 • On web at mit.edu/coal • Authors • John Deutch, Ernie Moniz (PIs) • Jim Katzer (Executive Director) • Stephen Ansolabehere, Janos Beer, Denny Ellerman, Julio Friedmann, Howard Herzog, Jake Jacoby, Paul Joskow, Lester Richard, Greg McRae, Edward Steinfeld Key question: What actions regarding technology do we take now to impact GHG emissions on a Gigaton scale in 2050? Howard Herzog / MIT Laboratory for Energy and the Environment

  5. Carbon Capture and Storage • Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) is the critical enabling technology that would reduce CO2 emissions significantly while also allowing coal to meet the world’s pressing energy needs. Howard Herzog / MIT Laboratory for Energy and the Environment

  6. Global Primary Energy Consumption under High CO2 PricesLimited Nuclear Generation Case MIT Coal Study Figure 2.4 Initial CO2 Price of $25/tCO2 in 2015 with 4%/yr increase Howard Herzog / MIT Laboratory for Energy and the Environment

  7. MIT Coal Study Key Takeaways • Technology readiness is critical – there are myriad of options to pursue • Don’t preclude options by anointing technology winners prematurely • We need to drastically increase R&D to bring CO2 capture technologies to fruition. There is urgency to move ahead now if we are to reach gigaton (Gt) scale by 2050. Large scale demonstration projects are key • No showstoppers, but moving from the megaton (Mt) scale to the Gt scale is a major challenge Howard Herzog / MIT Laboratory for Energy and the Environment

  8. SCPC vs. IGCC Comparison • Without capture • Efficiencies similar • Both handle criteria pollutant requirements • IGCC costs more • Limited IGCC operating experience (availability) • With capture • Incremental cost less for IGCC • Energy penalty less for IGCC • IGCC more complex • PC more fuel flexible SCPC = Supercritical Pulverized Coal IGCC = Integrated Coal Gasification Combined Cycle Howard Herzog / MIT Laboratory for Energy and the Environment

  9. Relative Cost of Electricity PC IGCC • Variability in costs can be from plant location (elevation, cooling water temperature, local costs, etc.), coal type, criteria emission levels, capacity factor, etc. Howard Herzog / MIT Laboratory for Energy and the Environment

  10. Relative Cost of Electricity PC IGCC • Variability in costs can be from plant location (elevation, cooling water temperature, local costs, etc.), coal type, criteria emission levels, capacity factor, etc. Howard Herzog / MIT Laboratory for Energy and the Environment

  11. MIT Coal StudyFinding #6 • It is premature to select one coal conversion technology as the preferred route for cost-effective electricity generation combined with CCS. • Variability in location, coal type, etc. • Uncertainty in technological progress Howard Herzog / MIT Laboratory for Energy and the Environment

  12. Retrofits • MIT Coal Study – “Coal plants will not be cheap to retrofit for CO2 capture.” • Limitations at existing plants • Space • Storage site access • Efficiency • Design of optimal “capture” plant differs from that of a “no capture” plant Howard Herzog / MIT Laboratory for Energy and the Environment

  13. MIT Coal Study Capture-Ready • Other than a few low-cost measures such as providing for extra space on the plant site and considering the potential for geologic CO2 storage in site selection, the opportunity to reduce the uncertain eventual cost of CCS retrofit by making preparatory investment in plants without CO2 capture does not look promising. Howard Herzog / MIT Laboratory for Energy and the Environment

  14. MIT Coal StudyFinding #5 • Current evidence indicates that it is scientifically feasible to store large quantities of CO2 in saline aquifers • In order to: • Address outstanding technical issues that need to be resolved to confirm CCS as a major mitigation option • Establish public confidence that large scale sequestration is practical and safe it is urgent to undertake a number of large scale (on the order of 1 Mt/yr injection) experimental projects in reservoirs that are instrumented, monitored, and analyzed to verify the practical reliability and implementation of sequestration. None of the current sequestration projects worldwide meets all of these criteria Howard Herzog / MIT Laboratory for Energy and the Environment

  15. Contact Information Howard Herzog Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Laboratory for Energy and the Environment (LFEE) Room E40-447 Cambridge, MA 02139 Phone: 617-253-0688 E-mail: hjherzog@mit.edu Web Site: sequestration.mit.edu Howard Herzog / MIT Laboratory for Energy and the Environment

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