Friday, 15/11/2024 | 16:50 GMT+7
It is one of the most abundant natural resources, providing around a quarter of the world's total energy and powering over 40 percent of our electricity supplies.
But it's also one of the dirtiest with the world's 2,300 coal-fired power stations contributing around 40 percent of all man-made emissions, according to the World Coal Institute. Their continued use enrages many environmentalists who argue that we should be phasing coal out. But the coal industry is pinning its hopes on the rather oxymoronic-sounding "clean coal," which has become the umbrella term for a range of new technologies that share the aim of cleaning up coal in the 21st century. Earth's Frontiers takes a look at the options:
Pre-combustion
According to the
SCCS says the technology has been proven at an industrial scale and is low-risk but requires a high investment, and the efficiency of the coal then burned to power turbines is compromised. Oxy-fuel combustion
Coal is burned in pure oxygen -- instead of air -- which creates
an exhaust stream containing around 90 percent CO2 (the other ten percent is
water vapor), making it easier to separate. The only downside to this method is that it requires a lot
of energy to remove the CO2. SCCS says new technology called chemical looping
combustion is being developed. If done properly, there are virtually no
emissions and could be retrofitted to existing coal-fired power stations. Swedish power company Vattenfall is currently testing this
method at the Schwarze Pumpe plant in
Post-combustion
This involves removing CO2 from flue gases after coal has
been burned. It's already been installed at a few gas-fired power stations like
Snohvit's liquid natural gas facility in
Another idea being developed uses quicklime (calcium oxide) which produces limestone. Needless to say, the process requires additional energy which SCCS estimates would raises costs by nearly a third.
The technology is already available but is used on a much smaller scale. The unknowns of scaling up the technology make it a less attractive proposition according to the SCCS. Storage Providing that carbon capture can become economically viable, vast amounts of CO2 will need to be stored. There are a number of projects around the world where carbon sequestration are being tested, with many others at the planning stage.
According to the SCCS, CO2 can be injected into depleted oil
and gas reservoirs, non-mineable coal seams, the ocean or deep saline aquifers
which offer great capacity. An impermeable cap rock above storage sites would
stop CO2 leaking back out. But some scientists remain concerned.
March Wentworth, a clean energy advocate from the Union of
Concerned Scientists says questions remain about pumping CO2 thousands of feet
underground.
"We're not yet knowing where it's going, not knowing
what the liability questions are, if it should bubble to the surface, and what
the health impacts are," Wentworth told CNN.
By Hong nhung