New York Times Op-Ed Blasts Carbon Capture

May 13, 2010

Carbon capture technologies are expensive, wasteful and woefully unprepared for the large volume of carbon that will need to buried, reused or otherwise discarded.

Carbon capture is energy intensive and the volume of the waste stream is equal to the world's daily oil production, says Robert Bryce

This according to a Op-Ed piece in The New York Times urging Senators to excise $2 billion in carbon capture research funding from John Kerry’s and Joseph Lieberman’s newly introduced climate bill.

The spending would come on top of $2.4 billion in Recovery Act money already being spent on capture and sequestration technologies. The theory, of course, is that these projects will remove carbon, a greenhouse gas, from the exhaust plumes of coal-fired power plants and reuse it, perhaps to enhance oil extraction at depleting wells.

But Robert Bryce, a senior fellow at the conservative Manhattan Institute, argues the effort may be a fool’s errand. For one, he writes carbon capture is an energy intensive process that could siphon away 28 percent of a plant’s output, cutting into fuel efficiency.

In addition, as much as 23,000 miles of new pipeline will need to be laid to transport the large carbon stream. That stream could amount to 8.2 million tons a day – or roughly the equivalent of the world’s daily oil production.

Capture and sequestration is not the Holy Grail of climate change fixes, he writes.


Energy Department Sees Carbon Capture Adding 35% To Electricity Costs

October 16, 2009

Carbon-capture technologies being earmarked for coal-fired electric plants could increase costs to consumers by 35 percent.

At least that is the target set by the Department of Energy as it prepares to disburse $55 million in technology funding.

Carbon capture holds the promise of clean coal

Carbon capture holds the promise of clean coal

Despite efforts already underway with carbon capture in places such as Canada and Norway, the department is setting a long-term 8 to 10 years target of widespread deployment of the technology.

The goal is to “support the development of technologies that can remove 90 percent of the CO2 in a (coal plant) flue gas stream at no more than a 35 percent increase in the cost of electricity,” said Energy Secretary Steve Chu.

Carbon capture is a key part of the recipe to reduce global warming. About 50 percent of the nation’s electricity comes from coal and about 20 percent of its greenhouse gas emissions. Coal reserves are plentiful and plants are expected to stay on line for decades to come.

Coal also is a key ingredient in China’s economic expansion with new plants going in every week.

Earlier this month, the International Energy Agency projected the world will need thousands of carbon capture projects by 2050.


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