Title: Dr. Hassan Arafat
1Energy and Environment
Introduction to Environmental consequences of
large scale energy generation Part II
Dr. Hassan Arafat Department of Chem.
Eng. An-Najah University
(these slides were adopted, with modification,
from Ms. Paulina Bohdanowicz , KTH Institute,
Sweden)
2Potential causes of concern associated with
fossil fuels
- Coal
- Global climate change, acid rain, environmental
effects of open-cast mining, land subsidence due
to deep mining, ground water pollution, mining
accidents, health effects on miners - Oil
- Global climate change, air pollution by vehicles,
acid rain, oil spills, oil rig accidents - Natural gas
- Global climate change, methane leakage from
pipes, methane explosions, gas rig accidents
Source Boyle et al. 2003
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4The recent decline and rise in China's reported
coal use has been attributed largely to
variations in data collection and not to severe
fluctuations in actual consumption.
5The recent decline and rise in China's reported
coal use has been attributed largely to
variations in data collection and not to severe
fluctuations in actual consumption.
6Oil global currency
7Includes crude oil, shale oil, oil sands, and
natural gas liquids (the liquid content of
natural gas where this is recovered
separately). Excludes liquid fuels from other
sources such as coal derivatives.
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10Average personal oil consumption
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151992-2003 data exclude natural gas that was
flared or recycled.
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17Coal
- the altered remains of prehistoric vegetation
that originally accumulated as plant material in
swamps and peat bogs - 400 millions yrs ago (the Devonian period)
start of the formation of large coal deposits - 350-280 million years ago (the Carboniferous
period) significant accumulations of coal in the
Northern Hemisphere - 350-225 million years ago (the Carboniferous/Permi
an period) in the Southern Hemisphere - approximately 100-15 million years ago(the late
Cretaceous period to early Tertiary era) in the
USA, South America, Indonesia and New Zealand - and now we are releasing all the carbon stored
and contained in it
Source World Coal Institute, Coal Power for
Progress, www.wci-coal.com, 2005
18Coal
- metamorphism or coalification undergone by a
coal - peat
- gt lignite
- gt sub-bituminous
- gt bituminous
- gt anthracite
- Influences its physical and chemical properties,
and is referred to as the rank of the coal
Source WCI 2005
19Coal cycle
- Mining
- Transport
- Processing
- Combustion
Source WCI 2005
20Impact assessment of mines
- before a mine opens, exhaustive studies of the
immediate environment are carried out to define
the existing conditions and to identify
sensitivities and potential problems - the studies address the impact of mining on
factors such as surface and ground water, soils,
local land use, and native vegetation and
wildlife populations - the findings are reviewed as part of the process
leading to the award of a mining permit by the
relevant government authorities - a detailed rehabilitation or reclamation plan is
designed and approved for each mine, covering the
period from the start of operations until well
after mining has finished
Source WCI 2005
21Mining
- 1. Underground mining (50)
- Anthracite seams (less than 10 of world coal
production) - 65-75 of coal recovered
- 2. Surface mining (50)
- lignite seams (25) are most often surface-mined
- economic only when the coal seam is near the
surface - more coal recovered
Bituminous seams (approximately 65) are mined in
roughly equal proportions by both methods
Source WCI 2005
22Mining
- 1. Underground Mining
- Room-and-pillar Mining
- Long-wall Mining
- Short-wall Mining
- Thick-seam Mining
- 2. Surface Mining
- Contour Strip Mining
- Area Strip Mining
- Open-pit Mining
- Auger Mining
Source WCI 2005
23Strip mining and land recovery
Source WCI 2005
24Choice of mining method
- economic factors
- energy demand and its growth,
- the supply and cost of alternative sources of
energy, - coal quality and the cost of coal preparation,
- the selling price of coal,
- advancements in technology that affect costs of
production, - environmental legislation
- technological factors
- the number of seams,
- the thickness and steepness of each seam,
- the nature and thickness of the strata overlying
the seams, - the quality of the coal seams,
- the surface topography,
- the surface features,
- the transportation networks available
Source WCI 2005
25Choice of mining method
- social factors
- prior history of mining in the area,
- ownership patterns,
- availability of labour,
- local or regional government support
Source WCI 2005
26Extraction underground mining
- Land subsidence
- Underground mine fires
- Air pollution
- Fugitive emissions of particulate matter and gas
(SO2, NOx, H2S, CH4) - Particulates gt respiratory diseases chronic
bronchitis, asthma - Gaseous emissions gt global warming, health
hazards to local population - Methane emissions depend on the mining methods,
depth of coal mining, coal quality and entrapped
gas content in the coal seams
Source WCI 2005
27Extraction underground mining
- Water pollution
- the carry-over of the suspended solids in the
drainage system of the mine stamp water and
storm-water drains - acidic water found in the underground aquifers
- waste-water from the coal preparation plant and
mine water - Discharge of effluents (alkaline compounds, acid
drainage, salty waters, heavy metals) - Waste materials (tailings)
Source WCI 2005
28Extraction surface mining
- Vegetation clearance gt erosion of soil
- Altering the drainage patterns
- Particulates
- Waste materials (tailings)
Source WCI 2005
29Oil
- oil deposits - located almost exclusively in
sedimentary rock and often associated with
certain geological structures - oil - usually found trapped in a layer of porous
sandstone, which lies just beneath a dome-shaped
or folded layer of some non-porous rock such as
limestone - in other formations the oil is trapped at a
fault, or break in the layers of the crust
30Oil locations - Alaska
31Petroleum Cycle
Combustion
Transport
Extraction
Refining
Derivatives
Pipelines
Tankers
Exploration
Processes 0,11
Onshore
Offshore
Well Development
Production
Drilling
Primary
Completion
Secondary
Tertiary
32Extraction oil drilling
- On-shore or off-shore
- Drilling procedures similar but rigs are
different - four main offshore rig types
- Submersibles are able to go down to 50m,
- Jack-Ups can go down to 110m,
- Semi-submersibles can go to 610m and
- Drillships up to 1680m
33Extraction oil drilling
- Exploration
- the search for rock formations associated with
oil deposits, and requires geophysical
prospecting and/or exploratory drilling - seismic survey, geophysics and geology
- Well Development
- Drilling
- Well Completion
34Extraction oil drilling drilling fluid
- sent down the drill pipe to allow the drill to
rotate - essential for cooling of the drill bit and the
rock, bringing loose chunks of rock up to the
surface, prevention of cave ins and losses of mud
into the formation being drilled - properties required depend upon the drilling
conditions - a gas or foam,
- liquid-based fluids (drilling muds) - more
extensively used - usually contain bentonite clay (that increases
the viscosity and alters the density of the
fluid), additives - 3 general categories of drilling muds
- water-based most frequently used,
- oil-based,
- synthetic-based.
35Extraction - drilling
- Production
- bringing the fluid to the surface, separating
liquid and gas components and removing impurities - Primary
- Secondary
- Tertiary
- Maintenance
- Well Abandonment
36Extraction - drilling
- Vegetation clearance (roads or drilling sites)
Soil erosion - Seismic waves
- Spills and blowouts
- Combustion gases
- Direct wastes
- Indirect wastes
37Extraction - drilling
- Direct Wastes
- drilling mud (high concentrations of Cd, As, Hg,
HC) - produced water from cooling (contaminated with
Cl, Na, Ca, Mg, K, organic compounds, various
metals, off shore drillings - high saline
concentrations), high BOD - sand (particulates, oil, wastes, metals)
- cleaning fluids for water (acids, Na, Ca, Cl and
CO3) - corrosion inhibitors, paint fumes and cleaning
solvents - gt acidification
- gt oxygen depletion
38Potential material outputs from the well
development process
- Air emissions
- Fugitive natural gas, other VOCs, PAHs, CO, CO2,
H2S - Waste water
- Drilling muds, organic acids, alkalis, diesel
oil, crankcase oils, acidic stimulation fluids
(HCl HF hydrofluoric acid) - Residual waste
- Drill cuttings (some oil-coated), drilling mud
solids, weighting agents, dispersants, corrosion
inhibitors, surfactants, flocculating agents,
concrete, casings, paraffins
Source Protecting Our Environment An
Environmental, Health and Safety Report from the
Oil and Natural Gas Industry, American Petroleum
Institute (API), Consumer Information, December
21 2000
39Potential material outputs from the production
process
- Air emissions
- Fugitive natural gas, other VOCs, PAHs, CO, CO2,
H2S, fugitive BTEX (benzene, toluene,
ethylbenzene, xylene) from natural gas
conditioning - Waste water
- Produced water heavy metals, radionuclides,
dissolved solids, oxygen-demanding organic
compoundsd, high level of salts - May contain additives including biocides,
lubricants, corrosion inhibitors - Waste water glycol, amines, salts and untreated
emulsions - Residual waste
- Sand, elemental sulphur, spent catalysits,
separator sludge, tank bottoms, used filters,
sanitary wastes
Source API 2000
40Potential material outputs from the maintenance
process
- Air emissions
- Volatile cleaning agents, paints, other VOCs,
hydrochloric acid gas - Waste water
- Completion fluid
- Waste water well-cleaning solvents (detergents
degreasers), paints, stimulation agents - Residual waste
- Pipe scale, waste paints, paraffins, cement, sand
Source API 2000
41Potential material outputs from the abandoned
wells, spills blowouts
- Air emissions
- Fugitive natural gas, other VOCs, PAHs,
particulate matter, sulphur compounds, CO, CO2 - Waste water
- Escaping oil and brine
- Residual waste
- Contaminated soils and sorbents
- risk of filtration and underground water
contamination
Source API 2000
42Extraction - drilling
- Waste appr. 1000 tonnes per well - impact on
ecosystems - Offshore drilling
- suspended solids - a danger for bottom-dwelling
and critical ocean-bottom habitats - a wide range of health and reproductive problems
for fish and other marine life - the threat of oil spills that would devastate
wildlife populations - destruction of kelp beds, reefs and coastal
wetlands
Source Committee Against Oil Exploration
43Extraction - drilling
- Over its lifetime, a single oil rig can
- Dump more than 90 000 metric tons of drilling
fluid and metal cuttings into the ocean - Drill between 50-100 wells, each dumping 11
tonnes of toxic metals, such as lead, chromium
and mercury, and potent carcinogens like toluene,
benzene, and xylene into the ocean. - pollute the air as much as 7000 cars driving 80
km a day.
Source Committee Against Oil Exploration
44Extraction
European Environment Agency (EEA), Europes
environment the third assessment, Environmental
assessment report, no.10, European Community,
Copenhagen 2003
Source EEA 2003
45Processing - coal
- Run-of-mine coal contains a mixture of different
size fractions, sometimes together with unwanted
impurities such as rock and dirt - Coal preparation/beneficiation processing of
raw run-of-mine coal into a range of clean,
graded and uniform coal products suitable for
commercial market - coal cleaning (crushing, separation of fractions,
washing, milling and solvent refining) - upgrading (decrease of moisture content),
- blending (mixing coals from different sources to
achieve acceptable quality, at lower cost), - bioprocesses (microbial desulphurisation)
- If coal of high quality only crushed screened
Source WCI 2005
46Processing - coal
- Effective preparation of coal prior to
combustion - improves the homogeneity of coal supplied,
- reduces transport costs,
- improves the utilisation efficiency,
- produces less ash for disposal at the power
plant, - and may reduce the emissions of oxides of
sulphur.
Source WCI 2005
47Coal processing - impacts
- Coal
- Storage in stock piles
- Particulates emission
- Water used for preparation
- Effluents (water, chemicals particulates)
- Loss of coal to waste
- Disposal of waste
Source WCI 2005
48Chemical composition of crude oil
- Constituent Quantity
- Sulphur 2.44 by weight
- Nitrogen 0.14 by weight
- Nickel 7.7 ppm
- Vanadium 28 ppm
- Naphtha fraction 22.7 by weight
- (boiling pt.from 20 to 205 C)
- High boiling fraction 77.3 by weight
- (boiling pt. above 205 C)
- Aromatics 23.3 by weight
- Paraffin 20.9 by weight
- Insoluble 3.5 by weight
Source EPA 2001
49Oil processing - refining
50Derivatives from one barrel of crude oil
- Product Gallons per barrel
- Gasoline 19.5
- Distillate Fuel Oil 9.2
- Kerosene-type jet fuel 4.1
- Residual fuel oil 2.3
- Liquefied Refinery Gases 1.9
- Still Gas 1.9
- Coke 1.8
- Asphalt and Road Oil 1.3
- Petrochemical feed stocks 1.2
- Lubricants 0.5
- Kerosene 0.2
- Others 0.3
Note Figures are based on 1995 average yields
for U.S. refineries. One barrel contains 42
gallons of crude oil. The total volume of
products made is 2.2 gallons greater than the
original 42 gallons of crude oil. It represents
processing gain.
Source EPA 2001
51Oil processing - impacts
- Air (precursors of ozone destruction, acid rain
and global warming) - volatile hydrocarbons from crude oil
- SOx from crude oil and process heat
- NOx and particulates from process heat
- H2S from sulphur recovery operations
- Energy-intensive operation so all pollutants
associated with energy transformation - Water
- contamination of the process wastewater from
desalting, distillation, cracking, and reforming
operations - needs treatment before disposal.
- large quantities of cooling water, which needs a
treatment prior to disposal - about 24 of total emissions are released to
wastewater
Source American Petroleum Institute, Sixth
Annual Petroleum Industry Environmental
Performance Report, 1998
52Oil processing - impacts
- Associated waste
- ammonia, toluene, benzene, xylenes, propylene,
methyl ethyl ketone (solvent), acids, caustic
products, lead - Hazardous solids
- desalter sludge
- spent catalysts
- other process sludge
- storage tank bottoms
Source API 1998
53Oil processing - impacts
- Water eutrophication (nitrogen)
- Toxicity for human and aquatic organisms
- Carcinogenic effects
- Affected plant growth
- In small amounts the compounds released could be
biodegraded by microorganisms
Source API 1998
54Emissions from refineries, per tonne of crude
oil processed
- Particulate matter - approx. 0.8 kg.
- SOx - approx. 1.3 kg.
- NOx - approx. 0.3 kg
Source API 1998
55Coal transportation
- App. 14 of coal produced world-wide is traded
internationally, although this figure is forecast
to rise. - 60 of coal used for power generation is used
within 50 km of the mine.
Source WCI 2005
56Major trade routes for coal, 1998
Approximate million tonnes per annum
Source WCI 2005
57Transportation
- Short distances
- conveyors and trucks
- Long distances
- trains (6 locomotives and 148 wagons amounting to
a length of more than 2 kilometers which can
carry about 8500 tones of coal) - barges
- ships
- Pipelines (for oil and gas)
Source WCI 2005
58Transportation
- Vehicles
- Fossil fuel combustion
- Emissions
- CO, CO2
- NOx
- SOx
- VOCs
- Particulate matter
- Respiratory diseases
- Toxicity
- Carcinogenic effects
- Greenhouse effect
- Acid rain
- Acidification
Source WCI 2005
59Transportation
- Vehicles
-
- Risk of oil spills (shore)
- Road accidents
- Water quality
- Aquatic fauna flora
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62The worlds most catastrophic oil spills
- Exxon Valdez (Prince William Sound, Alaska 1989)
- Ashland Oil (Floreffe, Pennsylvania 1988)
- Colonial Pipeline (Fairfax County, Virginia
1993) - Tampa Bay Barge Collision (Tampa Bay, Florida
1993)
63Transportation
Source EEA 2003
64Oil off-shore spills
- Impacts depend on
- Product
- Location
- Weather
- Flow dynamics
- Response measures taken
65Oil off-shore spills
- Harm to marine life
- by poisoning after ingestion
- by direct contact
- by destroying habitats
- by direct exposure to oil
- clogging feather gt impossible to fly and so
heavy the birds sink - eliminating the ability of feather and fur to
keep warm - colder climates, many oiled animals
die of hypothermia (drastically lowered body
temperatures) - The 'Torrey Canyon' oil spill (1967) 10 000
bird corpses found on beaches in England, but
estimations 90 of the birds killed - drown and
sink to the bottom of the ocean before they can
be washed up on a beach
66Transportation
67Transportation
68Transportation
- Pipelines
- Leakage, spills, explosions
- Soil, water air pollution
69Oil on-shore spills
- hydrocarbons are deposited in soil, groundwater
and around vegetation and wildlife - long-term risks posed by polycyclic aromatic
hydrocarbons (PAHs) - persistent oil residues - some PAHs - carcinogenic and toxic properties
- transport of hydrocarbons by groundwater a
potential threat to the nature and humans - potential explosions and fires
70Storage
- Coal
- Spontaneous fires
- Particulates emissions
- Gas emissions
- Leaching
- Oil
- (20 of underground tanks are leaking)
- Vapourisation air pollution
- Leaking of tanks soil water contamination
Source WCI 2005
71Coal uses
Global hard coal consumption in 1997 3755Mt
Source WCI 2005