Title: Coal and Biomass Gasification: Straw Dog Plan
1Coal and Biomass Gasification Straw Dog Plan
Presentation to CAE Energy Pathways Workshop
Series Three National Technology Projects
October 12, 2007 Jim Sarvinis, P.
Eng. Hatch Don Hewson, PhD. University of
Western Ontario
2Agenda
- Opening remarks
- Overview of draft Straw Dog plan
- Energy Pathways Project Recommendation
- Setting the Scene for a National Technology
Project - Current Gasification activities (Canada others)
- Framework Plan for 10-year National Technology
Projects - Links to GHG and Electrical Infrastructure
projects - Action Plan
- Break-out Sessions
- Reporting Outcomes
3Energy Pathways Project Recommendation
- Coal / Biomass Gasification should be advanced as
a National Technology Project
4National Technology ProjectSetting the Scene
- Challenges for coal gasification in Canada
- Projects are capital intensive
- Plant reliability historically lower than
competing technologies - Some technologies not proven for low rank coals
and high sulphur, low ash petcokes - Challenges for biomass gasification in Canada
- Economic feasibility
- Public acceptance of municipal solid waste (MSW)
- Key opportunities for gasification to use
low-cost, abundant feedstocks and sequester CO2 - National Technology Project would help overcome
challenges and realize opportunities
5Current Gasification Activities
- Commercial Operations
- Clean Coal Power Coalition (CCPC)
- Other Canadian Ventures
- FutureGen
- Clean Coal Power Initiative (CCPI)
- EPRI Coalfleet for Tomorrow
6Coal Based IGCC Power Plants
7Other Coal Gasification Plants
- Many existing plants capture CO2
- Coal-to-chemical applications need pure syngas
(H2 CO) - Great Plains CO2 pipeline to Weyburn,
Saskatchewan for EOR
Great Plains SNG Facility
SASOL Coal-to-Liquids
Eastman Coal-to-Chemicals
Many Others
8Canadian Clean Power Coalition
- Industry / government partnership supported by
Alberta Energy Research Institute (AERI), Natural
Resources Canada, Saskatchewan Industry and
Resources - Mandate To research, develop and demonstrate
commercially viable clean coal technology and
facilitate the construction of full-scale,
coal-fueled demonstration plants - designed to
remove greenhouse gases and other emissions - Planning to sponsor 33 million FEED study for
IGCC in Alberta
9Canadian Clean Power Coalition Members
- Basin Electric Power Co-Operative (BEPC)
- Own and operate North Dakota Synfuels Plant
- EPCOR
- Supercritical coal power plant in operation
(Genesee 3), in partnership with TransAlta - FEED study for a utility-scale coal gasification
facility - TransAlta
- Supercritical coal power plant development
(Keephills 3), in partnership with EPCOR - EPRI
- CoalFleet for Tomorrow international project
- Sherritt International
- Feasibility Study complete for Dodds-Roundhill
gasification plant (coal-to-hydrogen) - SaskPower
- 300 MWe oxyfuel power plant with 90 CO2 capture
for EOR studied, but recently deferred - Nova Scotia Power
- Low sulphur coal and petroleum coke utilization
CCPC members are motivated proponents of clean
coal usage and GHG reductions and many have
active projects of their own.
10Other Canadian Activities
- Operating Companies
- TransCanada Pipelines - 4B polygen plant
feasibility study with GE technology (Belle
Plaine, Saskatchewan petcoke feed). Provincial
support announced. - Technology Developers
- Plasco Energy (Ottawa) plasma gasification, MSW
demo plant in commissioning - AlterNrg (Calgary) plasma gasification, owners
of Westinghouse technology - Ergo Exergy (Montréal) underground coal
gasification - Available Energy Corp (Toronto) H2 priority
gasifier with CO2 sequestration - Research and Development
- CANMET Energy Technology Centre (Natural
Resources Canada) - University of Calgary, University of
Saskatchewan, various others
11FutureGen Project - USA
- Development of first-of-its-kind, coal fueled,
near-zero emissions 275MWe power plant - 1.5 billion public-private partnership
- Production of H2 for electricity and additional
products - Testing and commercializing new technologies
12FutureGen Project (continued)
- Goal Prove economic feasibility of coal-fueled
electricity production with carbon capture and
storage at a commercial scale - Public-Private partnership between the Department
of Energy (DOE) and the FutureGen Alliance Inc - Timeline
- FutureGen plans announced 2003
- Site selection by end of 2007
- Break ground in 2009
- Full-scale operation 2012
13FutureGen Block Flow
14FutureGen Site Selection
- Four candidate sites currently under final
selection review Texas and Illinois
15FutureGen Alliance Inc.
- Organizational body representing private industry
in collaboration with the DOE for development of
the FutureGen project - Non-profit consortium of coal and power
producers - Alliance members raised 400 million in funding
- Governed by a 12 member board and managed by a 3
member executive
16FutureGen Alliance Members
- American Electric Power Service Corp.
- Anglo American Services Ltd.
- BHP Billiton Energy Coal Inc.
- China Huaneng Group
- Consol Energy InC.
- E.ON U.S. LLC
- Foundation Coal Corp.
- Peabody Energy Corp.
- PPL Energy Services Group LLC
- Rio Tinto Energy America Services
- Southern Company Services Inc.
- Xstrata Coal Pty Ltd.
- Investing US33 M each per current budget
17Clean Coal Power Initiative (CCPI) - USA
- Government / industry cost-shared partnership
- Mandate Demonstrate innovative technologies for
clean coal utilization, which may lead to
improved energy security and environmental
protection - Demonstrated technologies selected to dovetail
with other initiatives such as FutureGen - Managed by US DOE National Energy Technology
Laboratory (NETL)
18Clean Coal Power Initiative (continued)
- Industrial Participants include
- Great River Energy
- NeuCo, Inc.
- University of Kentucky Research Foundations
- WMPI Pty LLC
- Western Greenbrier Co-Gen LLC
- Wisconsin Electric Power Co.
- Excelsior Energy, Inc.
- Pegasus Technologies
- Southern Company Services Inc.
19EPRI Coalfleet for Tomorrow - USA
- Mandate To accelerate deployment and
commercialization of clean, efficient, advanced
coal power systems - Industry initiative led by EPRI
- Main activities
- Commercial (Permitting issues / Incentives)
- Technical (IGCC plant design guidelines)
- R D
20EPRI Coalfleet (contd)
21EPRI Coalfleet Members
Alliant Energy Corp. Alstom Power Ameren Services
Company American Electric Power Arkansas Electric
Coop. Austin Energy Babcock Wilcox
Company Bechtel Corp. BP Alternative Energy
International California Energy
Commission ConocoPhillips Technology Consumers
Energy CPS Energy Dairyland Power Coop. Doosan
Heavy Industries Duke Energy Corp. Dynegy EdF Edis
on International Edison Mission
Energy ENEL Entergy E.ON UK E.ON US ESKOM
Salt River Project Siemens Southern California
Edison Southern Company Stanwell
Corporation TransCanada Pipelines
Limited Tri-State GT TVA TXU U.S. DOE (NETL) We
Energies Wolverine Power Xcel Energy
Exelon Corp. FPL GE Energy (USA) Golden Valley
Electrical Assoc. Great River Energy Hoosier
Energy Integrys Energy Group (WPS) Jacksonville
Electric Authority Kansas City Power
Light Kellogg Brown Root (KBR) Lincoln Electric
System Midwest Generation Minnesota
Power Mitsubishi Heavy Industries (MHI) Nebraska
Public Power District New York Power
Authority Oglethorpe Power PacifiCorp PNM
Resources Portland General Electric Pratt
Whitney Rocketdyne Richmond Power Light Rio
Tinto
22Framework Plan10-year National Technology
Project
- National Technology Project should result in one
or two gasification plants operating at
commercial scale by 2017 - Two types of projects to be considered
- Western Canada coal or petcoke for hydrogen
power - Eastern Canada coal and / or biomass (incl. MSW)
to power - Projects should include CO2 sequestration
23Framework Plan10-year National Technology
Project (contd)
- Public-private consortium of scale similar to
FutureGen - National funding mechanism required in which
federal government and benefiting provinces make
largest investments - Conservative Federal Energy Caucus should be
supportive of National Energy Mega-project
24Links to GHG and Electrical Infrastructure
Projects
- Obvious links with GHG emission reduction
initiative - Gasification provides more concentrated stream of
CO2 which can be economically separated for
sequestration
25Action Plan
- To be developed during break-out session
26Conclusion
- Thank you for your attention and comments
- For further information please contact
- Jim Sarvinis, P. Eng.
- 905-403-3831
- jsarvinis_at_hatch.ca
- Director, Energy Technologies Hatch
- 2800 Speakman Dr., Mississauga, Ontario, L5K 2R7
- Don Hewson, Ph. D.
- 519-383-8303
- dhewson_at_researchpark.ca
- Managing Director, Industrial Liaison
- University of Western Ontario Research and
Development Park - 1086 Modeland Rd., Sarnia, Ontario, N7S 6L2