1 / 19

Advances in Energy Studies Porto Venere, 24-28 September 2002

Advances in Energy Studies Porto Venere, 24-28 September 2002. CO 2 capture and storage (with emphasis on PEACS project of UCE for the IEA Greenhouse Gas R&D Programme) Erik Lysen Utrecht Centre for Energy research (UCE). Contents. Introduction Basics of CO 2 capture and storage

lydia
Télécharger la présentation

Advances in Energy Studies Porto Venere, 24-28 September 2002

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. Advances in Energy Studies Porto Venere, 24-28 September 2002 CO2 capture and storage (with emphasis on PEACS project of UCE for the IEA Greenhouse Gas R&D Programme) Erik Lysen Utrecht Centre for Energy research (UCE)

  2. Contents • Introduction • Basics of CO2 capture and storage • The PEACS study • Approach • Results

  3. Introduction • CO2 capture and storage is additional option for reduction of emissions (first: energy efficiency, renewables, fuel switching) • Focus on large point sources of CO2: hydrogen, ammonia plants (often pure CO2) and power plants (4% to 15% CO2)

  4. CO2 capture • Capture technology: solvent scrubbing (amines), membranes, adsorption • CO2 capture in power plants reduces efficiency: • Nat. gas CC: 56% => 47% (370 => 60 g/kWh) • Coal fired: 46% => 33% (720 => 150 g/kWh) • Gasif. CC: 46%=> 38% (710 => 130 g/kWh) Source: Carbon Dioxide Capture and Storage, IEA/OECD, 2000

  5. CO2 capture costs • CO2 capture increases capital costs plants: NGCC: 100%, coal: 80%, IGCC: 50% • Cost of electricity generation increases: • NGCC: + 1 USct/kWh • Coal: + 2.5 USct/kWh • IGCC: + 2 USct/kWh • Cost avoided emissions: US$ 30-50/tonne of CO2 Source: Carbon Dioxide Capture and Storage, IEA/OECD, 2000

  6. CO2 storage potential • Depleted oil and gas reservoirs: 920 Gt CO2 (45% of world emissions until 2050) (EOR standard: 33 Mt/yr in 74 projects) • Deep saline aquifers: 400 - 10000 Gt CO2 (20 to 500% of world emissions until 2050) (Norwegian Sleipner field: 1 Mt/yr) • Unmineable coal beds: > 15 Gt CO2 (ECBM: 2 CO2 fixed => 1 CH4 free) • Deep ocean: ?? Source: Carbon Dioxide Capture and Storage, IEA/OECD, 2000

  7. Subject PEACS study • Capture: select high purity sources, world-wide (hydrogen, ammonia, no power plants) • Transmission: limit to 50 or 100 km • Injection/storage: - world-wide oilfields: EOR options - world-wide coal fields: ECBM options • PEACS (Project Early Application Carbon dioxide Storage): Select best combination Source: PEACS Study, UCE, for IEA-GHG, 2002

  8. Approach • Start with existing inventory CO2 sources (14652 sources: IEA GHG study by Ecofys) • Use inventories of oil and coal fields • Produce “long list” of 198 “pre-selected sources” with >40% CO2 and > 0.1 MT/yr • Econ. + MCA: short list 30 combinations • With IEA GHG: select 4 cases

  9. Cumulative CO2 emission of sources

  10. Pre-selection of sources • Minimum percentage of 40% CO2 in waste stream: 443 sources, plus 20 hydrogen plants (8-100%) • Minimum CO2 emission of 100,000 tonnes per year: 198 sources remain • These are called: “pre-selected sources”

  11. Geographical distribution pre-selected sources

  12. Distance grid to sources

  13. Oil occurrences

  14. Opportunities for EOR

  15. Combining CO2 sources and EOR sinks

  16. Results • Long list with: - 62 sources with 409 EOR combinations - 58 sources with 78 ECBM combinations • Initial selection procedure and Multi Criteria Analysis: short list with 15 EOR and 15 ECBM • Final selection: 2 EOR and 2 ECBM

  17. Final four cases

  18. EOR costs

  19. ECBM costs

More Related