Posted on 04/03/2015 4:53:07 AM PDT by thackney
A new power plant in West Texas that could transform coal into cleaner-burning natural gas is poised to break ground later this year, an executive in charge of the project said at a conference in Houston Wednesday.
The project, located on a 600-acre site in Odessa, uses coal as a feedstock for a 400 megawatt power plant. But instead of burning it, the plant uses a chemical process to first strip it of carbon, sulfur and mercury.
The result, project leaders say, is a hydrocarbon that can fuel the power plan but burns even cleaner than natural gas even though it was derived from coal. The extra carbon dioxide that gets stripped away is sold to production company Whiting Petroleum, which can pump in underground through a process known as enhanced oil recovery that helps coax more hydrocarbons from the earth.
Were not actually burning coal; were unlocking hydrocarbons, said Jason Crew, CEO of Summit Power, the Seattle-based company behind the undertaking dubbed the Texas Clean Energy Project.
The U.S. Department of Energy has awarded the project $450 million in federal grants. Even though the U.S. is moving to phase-out coal in favor of natural gas-fired plants and alternative energy sources, coal is still poised to be a vital source of energy for the U.S. and other countries for years to come, said Jason Lewis, federal project manager at the U.S. Department of Energys National Energy Technology Laboratory.
But Lewis said development of the method, known as carbon capture and storage, faces headwinds. Questions remain about the economics of carbon capture projects, among other factors.
But the feds hope that by investing in the Odessa project, theyll be able to learn more about both the technology and finances of the operation and eventually have a model that can be used elsewhere, allowing coal to be used more cleanly as other fuel sources are developed.
Carbon dioxide emissions will go up unless we do something now, Lewis said.
The Odessa project is one of three carbon-capture projects in Texas.
The Petra Nova project, a joint venture involving NRG Energy Inc., is under construction in Fort Bend County. Technology added to an existing power plant is designed to capture carbon before its emitted into the atmosphere.
Air Products and Chemicals is capturing carbon from a hydrogen production facility in Port Arthur. All three projects have received federal support.
The technology has garnered mixed reaction from the environmental community.
While the Natural Resources Defense Council says that carbon capture is one of several solutions that could help reduce carbon pollution from power plants, Sierra Club officials say they prefer focusing resources on the development of wind and solar power generation.
there are 2 such plants here making chemical feed stock from coal that have been operational for many years
just this year, the company ran a gas line 6 miles from the pipeline terminus in to power 2 of their coal fired 5 generators.
The company abandoned such a project with CO2 sequestering in Texas a few years back
Millions of taxpayer dollars waste to solve a non-existent problem.
Coal is an excellent and inexpensive source of power. Why this country tolerates this attack on a vital industry is beyond my understanding.
These environmental communist should be imprisoned for treason.
This is bizarre... a few years ago my client in Monahans had sent me some preliminary loading diagrams for some dimensional loads for the Texas Clean Energy Project large power plant sized equipment that would be shipped in by rail. I thought this project had something to do carbon sequestration BS. What was very odd to me was that they were looking to unload in Monahans, when they could very well just unload in Midland/Odessa. This was a long time ago... like 2-3 years ago.
Whiting Oil & Gas has a CO2 recovery unit in Wickett, Texas so if used there, Monahans would make more sense than Midland/Odessa.
https://www.cranepumps.com/downloadables/ProductPromotion/Split_Case_CaseStudy_WICKETT_TX.PDF
Wickett does sound familiar now that you mention it... without looking at a map I seem to recall it was southeast of Mon... like I said, that was a while back and I can’t even remember what I ate for breakfast anymore.
Wickett is about a 10 minute drive down 57 from Monahans.
Oh duh... just west of town... so that’s where FM 1219 comes out. I was there for building the Halliburton sand transload facility at the other end of FM 1219... and up near Wink for the Genesis crude loadout. I built that. Very soul-satisfying work.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.