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| Supersize
That. Wisconsins 80-ton feedwater heaters
are much larger than a subcritical powerplants.
(Photo courtesy of Black & Veatch) |
Coal is returning to
favor as a powerplant fuel, driven by rising electricity demand
and rising costs for competing fuels. As utilities and private-power
developers seek to get ahead of the next surge in powerplant
construction, they are proposing, in record numbers, plants
using technologies that reduce coals notoriously dirty
emissions. Coal-fueled powerplants that produce near-zero emissions
also are coming, thanks to intensive public and private research
programs.
Renewed interest in coal "is
clearly driven by fuel-cost issues," says Gregory A.
Anderson, executive vice president of fossil-power technologies
for Sargent & Lundy LLC, Chicago. The firm is analyzing
a variety of coal-generation technologies for several utilities.
"If they can close old [simple-cycle] gas-fired generation,
they will do it now," he says.
Clean coal technology helps overcome
community resistance to coals emissions. "Coal
is a four-letter word," says John Thompson, advocacy
coordinator for Boston-based Clean Air Taskforce, an environmental
group. "If we dont radically change the nature
of how we use coal, our options for global warming are going
to be zero. Particulates and global warming are the main concerns
in this century."
Many environmental activists still
call "clean coal" an oxymoron. But as a baseload
fuel, "coal is not a good thing or a bad thing; its
just a reality," Thompson says.
Clean or advanced coal technologies
increase energy efficiency and reduce flue-gas emissions while
generating electricity from coal (see
related story). Gasification
allows separation of impurities before combustion, while circulating
fluidized-bed and supercritical pulverized-coal processes
cut emissions in the combustion cycle. Now, tested and demonstrated,
they are moving toward commercial operation.
Click
here to view chart
Powerplant owners and researchers,
pursuing the goal of near-zero emissions and higher efficiency,
are pushing still others through the development pipeline.
The $1-billion FutureGen program, using $650 million in Dept.
of Energy funds to build the worlds first powerplant
with near-zero emissions, took a major step forward in September
with the formation of an alliance to develop the project (ENR
10/3 p. 22). In mid-November, DOE selected two other projects
valued at nearly $10 million to demonstrate "oxycombustion,"
a carbon-capture technology that combusts coal with oxygen
instead of air. Observers expect these pilot technologies
to become commercially viable over the next 10 years as more
stringent environmental regulations reduce marginally higher
costs over conventional powerplants.
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| Material
Success. New alloys stand up under supercriticals
high temperature and pressure conditions. (Photo courtesy
of Hitachi America Ltd.) |
Fast Growth
After a lengthy period of slow growth, the U.S. electric
system from 1999 to 2004 grew by 25%, adding more than 200,000
MW of generation capacity. Most of these new plants burn natural
gas, which was cheap, easy to permit and burns cleaner than
coal. In 2003, DOEs Energy Information Administration
forecast that by 2025, 74,000 MW of new coal capacity would
be added to the nations generation capacity, making
up 17% of projected new capacity. Two years later, EIA is
forecasting 87,000 MW of new coal capacity by 2025. Coals
proportion of projected total new capacity is up to 33% by
2025. Even more striking, 18,154 MW now proposed would use
advanced coal technology.
Click
here to view map
Many environmentalists consider
gasification the best use of coal for generation. With gasification,
sulfur dioxide (SO2), carbon dioxide (CO2), mercury and oxides
of nitrogen (NOx) are stripped from the synthesis gas stream
before combustion. "We have all the technology to isolate
CO2 from syngas commercially demonstrated and ready to operate
today," Thompson.
The Clean Air Interstate Rule,
issued last spring by the Environmental Protection Agency,
will make massive cuts in SO2, NOx and fine particulate (PM)
levels. Affecting 28 states in the eastern U.S. and the District
of Columbia, it will cut NOx by 68% in 2009 and by 72% in
2015 from its current allowable average level of .46 lb per
million Btu of coal fired.
Emission allowances for SO2 under
the cap-and-trade program will fall by 50% in 2010 and 65%
in 2015 in the affected region. Particulate rules are still
being discussed, but the regulation of SO2 and NOx will dramatically
reduce particulates because those compounds react with other
matter in the atmosphere to form fine particulates, says Gary
Brown, senior technologist in the air quality group of CH2M
Hill Cos. Ltd., Denver.
Despite President Bushs 2001
rejection of the Kyoto Protocol, a large number of U.S. industrial
companies assume regulation is inevitable and have joined
the Chicago Climate Exchange, a market for carbon-emission
allowances.
Current and anticipated emission
regulations are still forcing generators using subcritical
pulverized-coal to add to capital costs with back-end equipment
like scrubbers, selective catalytic reduction and baghouses
or electrostatic precipitators. Even power developers using
advanced coal technologies, which already have lower emissions
than subcritical systems, must add the equipment to achieve
permitted emission levels.
Click
here to view chart
"We dont see supercritical
costing us more. If we do, itll be 1 to 3% [capital
cost], but we would offset it in operating cost," says
Marty Swartz, project director of the supercritical Granite
Fox Power Project. IGCC capital costs, in contrast, are 25%
more, and operating costs are 100% more, he says. "The
gasifier requires a lot of maintenance," he notes.
Granite Fox Power LLC, a wholly
owned subsidiary of San Diego-based Sempra Generation, is
proposing a two-unit, 1,450-MW supercritical PC powerplant
in Gerlach, Nev., costing an estimated $2.5 billion. "Theres
a lot of environmental pressure to reduce CO2 emissions,"
says Swartz. Supercritical PC overall emissions are lower
because supercritical combustion is more efficient than subcritical.
It uses less fuel.
If the permits are in place in
early 2007, as scheduled, construction would begin soon after,
aiming for completion in 2011 for both units, Swartz says.
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+Enlarge |
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| In
the Game. Circulating fluidized-bed (left) and
IGCC are two clean coal technologies with near-term promise. |
Rebirth
Many supercritical plants have been constructed in Europe,
South Korea and Japan, where high fuel costs made their efficiency
especially attractive. But Barberton, Ohio-based Babcock &
Wilcox Co. claims the first supercritical system, a 125-MW
universal-pressure boiler built in 1957 for Ohio Power Co.
More than 150 supercritical plants were built in the U.S.
in subsequent decades, but the generation market became overbuilt
and faded about 1980. Advances in metallurgy since then have
made the technology more reliable.
A bad experience with early generations
of supercritical technology in the U.S. left "a sour
taste," says Ray Kowalik, vice president and general
manager...
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