Title: Energy Efficiency and Climate- Friendly Power Supply
1 Energy Efficiency and Climate-Friendly Power
Supply
- Electricity 2020
- Bill Grant
- Izaak Walton League of America
2No energy free lunch
- Nuclear power exposure, waste disposal
- Hydropower river impoundment, flooding
- Oil air emissions, availability
- Natural gas availability, price
- Renewables variability, price, bird kills
- Coal air emissions, toxic releases, mining
impacts, combustion waste, global warming
3Efficiency Minnesotas Least Cost Energy Source
- Electric use is growing at 2/year without
efficiency, we will need to add new supply - Since 1990, Minnesota electric utilities have
saved 2,000 megawatts, the equivalent of two
large coal or nuclear power plants - Savings have come at less than 2 cents/kWh
compare to new coal at over 6.5 cents/kWh
4Benefits of Energy Efficiency
- Lowest cost resource
- Economic development and job creation
- 4,000 new jobs by 2010 200 million in annual
economic output - Reduces need for new power plants
- Reduces pollution
- 20 million tons of CO2 reduced with Governors
proposed goal of 1.5 annual savings - When combined with new renewable energy
development, can meet new power needs and reduce
CO2 emissions
5(No Transcript)
6Climate Friendly Power Supply
- Renewable energy Wind, biomass, solar,
hydroelectric, geothermal - Proposed 25 X 25 renewable energy standard will
cut CO2 emissions by 17 million tons (11) - Combined heat and power (cogeneration)
- Coal gasification with carbon sequestration
7Fuels Used to Generate Electricity in MN
Source DOC
8SOURCE NETL.DOE
9Proposed Midwest Coal Plants
102002 Minnesota CO2 Emissions
Source MPCA
11Carbon Dioxide
- No longer a question of if climate change is
happening now a question of what the impacts
will be - Recently released IPCC report asserts that human
activity is likely the cause urgent action on a
global scale is needed, but its not too late to
avoid catastrophic warming - Midwest (MN, WI, MI, IL, IN, OH) coal-fired power
plants are responsible for 8 of total U.S. CO2
emissions and 2 of world total CO2 emissions - North Americas mean temperature has already
risen 1.25ºF, global mean temperature has already
risen 1ºF
12CO2 economic impacts
- Climate change will impact traditional Midwest
economic sectors agriculture, forestry,
shipping, recreation, etc. - Ships either carry less or need for more dredging
(which will release buried toxins) which may
increase shipping costs - Agriculture will experience some initial benefits
due to longer growing season, but over time,
there may be a northern migration of pests and
plant diseases - Recreation and tourism industries will also be
impacted - Decline in winter recreation opportunities with
shorter winters - Lake ice cover in Madison, WI, declined from 120
days per year in 1850 to 90 days per year today - Summer recreation boating impacts (lower water
levels will affect marina owners, increase costs)
13The Clean-up Conundrum
- Spending millions of dollars to clean up old
coal-fired power plants has the unwanted effect
of extending plant lifetimes creates barriers to
market entry for new, cleaner technologies - Adding controls for SOX, NOX, and mercury may
lead to even higher CO2 emissions
14Gasification Overview
- 130 gasification plants in operation world-wide
- Most of these are in chemical production, not
electricity - Technology is referred to as integrated
gasification combined cycle (IGCC) - There are 16 IGCC plants that operate now or have
been in operation. Another 6 IGCC plants are in
development. - These use a variety of fuels including oil, pet
coke,and coal
15CO2 Emissions IGCC v. Coal
- IGCC technology easily captures CO2 from air
emissions. - - Getting the CO2 out of the IGCC emissions
stream is easy, but compression and
sequestration is expensive. - Conventional coal plants cant remove CO2 from
emissions at any reasonable cost.
16Implications
- Options to stop global warming could close if the
next generation of coal plants worldwide cant
capture carbon dioxide. - Climate scientists generally agree on need to cut
CO2 emissions by 80 before 2050. A full
implementation of efficiency and renewable energy
cannot reach this target without carbon
sequestration or some combination of nuclear,
fuel switching (i.e., natural gas), or carbon
sinks (forests, ag soils, etc) -
- Need to establish IGCC with the option of
capturing carbon dioxide as the dominant coal
technology in the United States and export that
example worldwide. -
17Carbon Sequestration
- Terrestrial sequestration (forest and
agricultural crops) - Underground injection a.k.a. geologic
sequestration is not new - Current fluid injection practiced for a wide
range of industries, including summer natural gas
storage, enhanced oil recovery, hazardous waste,
oilfield brine - Geology of MN may not lend itself to geologic
sequestration Canadian Shield granite - Still many questions
18Underground injection is not new
The mass of current U.S. fluid injections is
greater than the mass of current power plant CO2
emissions.
10000
Large quantities
Sub-seabed
Gases
Long Time Frame
1000
2.7 Gt
.5 Gt
Mt/year
100
150Mt
34 Mt
6Mt
10
28Mt
1.2 Mt
2 Mt
1
Oilfield Brine
Acid Gas
FL Municipal
Hazardous
Natural Gas
CO2 for
OCS water injected for EOR and brine disposal
OCS gases (e.g., NG)
Wastewater
Waste
Storage
EOR
Complied by EPP Ph.D. student E. Wilson with data
from EPA, 2001 Deurling, 2001 Keith, 2001
DOE, 2001 DOE, 2001.
19Geologic Formations with Carbon Sequestration
Potential
20State IGCC Experience
- States with existing IGCC power plants using coal
as a feedstock - Indiana 192 MW Wabash River plant
- Florida 262 MW unit at the Polk Station in
Tampa, owned by Tampa Electric Co. - Other gasification plants produce chemicals, not
power, using coal, petcoke, petroleum, and/or
gas. Examples - North Dakota Great Plains Synfuels
- Texas Houston Oxochemicals
- Louisiana Baton Rouge Oxochemicals
- Tennessee Eastman Kodak
21In conclusion
- Getting serious about energy efficiency makes
sense regardless of your views on global warming
it is the ultimate no regrets strategy - Ditto for renewables, esp. wind and biomass
- Coals predominance in the electric sector
requires a carbon-neutral solution, e.g., coal
gasification with carbon sequestration