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alp227

(32,006 posts)
Sat May 19, 2012, 02:42 AM May 2012

With Natural Gas Plentiful and Cheap, Carbon Capture Projects Stumble

A federal proposal to ban the construction of coal-fired power plants that release all of their carbon dioxide into the atmosphere would seem to smooth the way for carbon capture, a budding technology that traps the greenhouse gas for storage or other uses.

But even as the Environmental Protection Agency prepares to open hearings on the proposed rule, unveiled in March, industry experts say the persistently low price of natural gas is threatening the viability of the nation’s carbon capture projects.

Natural gas is so cheap and plentiful that utilities have little incentive to build coal-fired plants with the capture technology. And the proposed rule exempts existing coal- and gas-fired plants.

In the tiny universe of American carbon capture projects, the first casualty may be the Taylorville Energy Center, a project in the coal fields of Illinois. The plan was to cook coal into methane, capture the carbon dioxide released in the process, then burn the methane in a conventional natural gas-style power plant.

full: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/19/business/energy-environment/low-natural-gas-prices-threaten-carbon-capture-projects.html

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With Natural Gas Plentiful and Cheap, Carbon Capture Projects Stumble (Original Post) alp227 May 2012 OP
Carbon capture is long term gold. napoleon_in_rags May 2012 #1

napoleon_in_rags

(3,991 posts)
1. Carbon capture is long term gold.
Sat May 19, 2012, 02:53 AM
May 2012

Especially the research efforts to take it to the next level of efficiency, and capitalization on the captured products. Anything based on coal will pay off eventually, there is just too much of it to go away.

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