1 / 12

Summit Carbon Capture A business of the Summit Power Group, LLC

Summit Carbon Capture A business of the Summit Power Group, LLC. Commercialization of CCS on NGCC Power Systems USEA Workshop | April 2014 Sasha Mackler, Vice President, Summit Power Group. Summit Power Group, LLC. Seattle-based developer of clean energy projects

luigi
Télécharger la présentation

Summit Carbon Capture A business of the Summit Power Group, LLC

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Summit Carbon CaptureA business of the Summit Power Group, LLC Commercialization of CCS on NGCC Power Systems USEA Workshop | April 2014 Sasha Mackler, Vice President, Summit Power Group

  2. Summit Power Group, LLC • Seattle-based developer of clean energy projects • Founded 25 ago by former U.S. Secretary of Energy Don Hodel & COO of Department of Energy Earl Gjelde • Flexible Development Model from fee-based, to build/own/transfer, to asset ownership or management • World class international development team • Over 9,000 MW developed • Summit’s capabilities include development, financing, & asset management of • Wind and solar plants • High efficiency natural gas fired plants • Large scale gasification facilities • CO2capture for EOR

  3. Summit Carbon Capture, LLC Summit Carbon Capture (SCC) is a vertically integrated developer of CO2 assets specializing in the industrial capture of CO2 for use in enhanced oil recovery projects and permanent storage. • SCC Areas of Focus • Large-scale gasification facilities with CO2 capture • Natural gas fired power plants with post combustion capture of CO2 • Retrofits of existing coal & gas plants for CO2 capture • CO2 EOR projects • SCC Competitive Advantage • Strong partnerships with leading global firms • Sophistication and flexibility in key areas of finance, policy, stakeholder relations

  4. Summit’s Carbon Capture Focus • Developing ultra low carbon, baseload power projects to meet demand for (1) CO2 for EOR and (2) clean electricity & fuels • Focusing on capturing CO2 from either newly built or retrofit power plants • Based on either coal or natural gas • Technology agnostic • Summit is currently developing one of the most advanced carbon capture projects in the world, the Texas Clean Energy Project, and developing a pipeline of others • Summit recently bid a NGCC with CCS retrofit project into the Colorado RFP • Summit is negotiating contract with UK gov’t for CCS project with 4M tpy of CO2 • Summit is involved in shaping regulatory and policy schemes for CCS, including • Developing new carbon credit methodology for CO2/EOR with American Carbon Registry • Strong engagement with US EPA and states on emission regs and CO2 storage rules

  5. Importance of CCS • IEA World Energy Outlook, 2013 – “‘Carbon capture and storage (CCS) has been identified as an essential technology to meet the internationally agreed goal of limiting the temperature increase to 2°C.” • Stanford Energy Modeling Forum 27 – “‘A robust finding [of the study] is that the unavailability of carbon capture and storage and limited availability of bioenergy have the largest impact on feasibility and macroeconomic costs for stabilizing atmospheric concentrations at low levels” and “..a substantial number of models were not able to produce 450 ppm without CCS.” • Regulatory drivers, public support, and commercial opportunities are emerging…

  6. Observations on PCC Technology “Readiness” • Amine based capture systems are widely used in the refining and chemicals industry for CO2 separation and cleanup • Extensive commercial experience in industrial settings • Amines are adequate technologies to TRANSFER to power industry for post-combustion capture of CO2 from power plant flue streams • Next generation technologies (designed for power) will be better • General confidence that these technologies can work in the power sector, reinforced by (1) extensive pilot projects and (2) large scale projects underway • Equipment providers are pursuing more projects, offering warranties • Commercial experience now is vital to inform the key questions on PCC viability, eg • Can the cost & performance of these projects be compelling in a power industry setting? (should not be asking “will they work?” – see above)

  7. Observations on the “Emerging” CCS Market • CCS is a portfolio of technologies, some better understood than others • Pre-combustion, Post-combustion, Oxy combustion • CO2 transportation, utilization, storage via EOR or Saline • Commercial Drivers – Strong EOR demand for more CO2 supplies • 40 years of commercial experience handling and injecting CO2 for EOR • Existing infrastructure and known “sinks” • Workable and well-understand regulatory framework for EOR • But anxieties over shifting rules could jeopardize EOR as enabler • Regulatory Drivers - EPA has (1) declared CO2 a pollutant , (2) concluded CO2 can be “incidentally stored” in an EOR flood, and (3) determined that CCS is commercially viable today and is currently working on federally enforceable emission performance standards for fossil fired power plants • These federal rules will unavoidably become a driver for CCS • States also active

  8. CCS on NGCC Power Systems • The focus on CCS from research and policy bodies has been on coal plants • But commercial players in market are also interested in NGCC with CCS • No fundamental challenges for NGCC vs Coal • Pro: Clean flue gas stream that is consistent across projects (simplifying engineering and enabling more standard designs) • Con: Less concentrated CO2 in exhaust gas • For new plants, the economics appear to favor NGCC relative to coal with CCS • NGCC CCS can be commercially developed in smaller units than new coal with CCS and with less technology integration than IGCC • For retrofits of existing plants, either coal or NGCC could make sense • Economic comparison depends other installed emission controls, plant dispatch, specific geography • Some regions with CO2 demand have more NGCC plants to target

  9. CCS Deployment • NGCC with CCS is viable and compares with other low-CO2 technologies • EOR will be a vital driver • Innovation in technology & in business arrangements critically important • Public support needed to (1) close cost gap between uncontrolled NGCC & with CCS and (2) accommodate baseload dispatch • There are precedents for this if we look elsewhere • Renewables, Combined Heat & Power • Just as we have seen for wind and solar over last decade, NGCC with CCS costs will come down as • Capital structure improves • Commercial learning occurs, which drives down technology costs and project implementation costs • Market internalizes policies and financing becomes standardized

  10. Contact Information

More Related