1 research outputs found
Identifying/Quantifying Environmental Trade-offs Inherent in GHG Reduction Strategies for Coal-Fired Power
Improvements
to coal power plant technology and the cofired combustion
of biomass promise direct greenhouse gas (GHG) reductions for existing
coal-fired power plants. Questions remain as to what the reduction
potentials are from a life cycle perspective and if it will result
in unintended increases in impacts to air and water quality and human
health. This study provides a unique analysis of the potential environmental
impact reductions from upgrading existing subcritical pulverized coal
power plants to increase their efficiency, improving environmental
controls, cofiring biomass, and exporting steam for industrial use. The climate impacts
are examined in both a traditionalî—¸100 year GWPî—¸method
and a time series analysis that accounts for emission and uptake timing
over the life of the power plant. Compared to fleet average pulverized
bed boilers (33% efficiency), we find that circulating fluidized bed
boilers (39% efficiency) may provide GHG reductions of about 13% when
using 100% coal and reductions of about 20–37% when cofiring
with 30% biomass. Additional greenhouse gas reductions from combined
heat and power are minimal if the steam coproduct displaces steam
from an efficient natural gas boiler. These upgrades and cofiring
biomass can also reduce other life cycle impacts, although there may
be increased impacts to water quality (eutrophication) when using
biomass from an intensely cultivated source. Climate change impacts
are sensitive to the timing of emissions and carbon sequestration
as well as the time horizon over which impacts are considered, particularly
for long growth woody biomass