Fripp 2009 Generator LCA PDF
Fripp 2009 Generator LCA PDF
Fripp 2009 Generator LCA PDF
EMISSIONS
FROM
CLEAN
COAL,
CLEAN
GAS
AND
WIND
GENERATORS
Prepared
for:
NextEra
Energy
Resources
Juno
Beach,
Florida
Prepared
by:
Matthias
Fripp,
Ph.D.
Environmental
Change
Institute,
University
of
Oxford
April
30,
2009
Contents
Contents ............................................................................................................................................ 1
1.
Introduction............................................................................................................................. 1
2.
Power
Plant
Life
Cycle
Stages............................................................................................. 1
3.
Fuel
Combustion..................................................................................................................... 3
3.1.
Fuel
Carbon
Intensity .................................................................................................................. 3
3.2.
Power
Plant
Heat
Rates .............................................................................................................. 4
4.
Fuel
Production
and
Delivery ............................................................................................ 5
5.
Methane
Emissions................................................................................................................ 7
5.1.
Coal
Mines ....................................................................................................................................... 7
5.2.
Natural
Gas
Infrastructure ........................................................................................................ 8
6.
NonCarbon
Dioxide
Emissions
Control
and
Emissions............................................ 9
6.1.
Emissions
Control ......................................................................................................................... 9
6.2.
NonCO2
Greenhouse
Gas
Emissions.....................................................................................10
7.
Power
Plant
Construction
and
Decommissioning ....................................................11
7.1.
Fossil
Plants ..................................................................................................................................11
7.2.
Wind
Farms...................................................................................................................................12
8.
Power
Plant
Operation
and
Maintenance....................................................................14
8.1.
Coal
and
Natural
Gas
Plants ....................................................................................................14
8.2.
Wind
Farms...................................................................................................................................14
9.
Carbon
Capture
and
Sequestration................................................................................15
9.1.
Emissions
from
Carbon
Capture
System .............................................................................15
9.2.
Effect
of
Carbon
Capture
System
on
Power
Plant
Efficiency ........................................17
9.3.
LifeCycle
Emission
Model,
Including
Carbon
Capture...................................................17
10.
Total
LifeCycle
Emissions
from
Power
Plants ........................................................18
11.
Conclusions..........................................................................................................................21
References ......................................................................................................................................23
Life‐Cycle
Greenhouse
Gas
Emissions
from
Clean
Coal,
Clean
Gas
and
Wind
Generators
1. Introduction
“Clean
coal,”
“clean
gas”
or
wind‐powered
generators
are
often
identified
as
potential
ways
of
reducing
greenhouse
gas
emissions
from
the
U.S.
electric
power
system.
The
direct
emissions
of
greenhouse
gases
produced
when
these
generators
burn
fuel
are
fairly
well
understood,
but
less
attention
has
been
given
to
emissions
during
the
other
stages
of
the
life‐cycle
of
these
plants
–
building
the
plants,
mining
or
drilling
for
fuel,
operating
the
plants,
etc.
Emissions
from
these
other
stages
of
the
life‐cycle
become
increasingly
important
if
we
contemplate
the
use
of
carbon
capture
and
sequestration
systems
for
coal
and
gas
plants.
These
systems
could
capture
and
sequester
around
90
percent
of
the
direct
emissions
from
new
coal
and
gas
plants.
However,
they
do
not
reduce
emissions
from
other
stages
of
the
life‐cycle.
On
the
contrary,
as
additional
industrial
processes
carbon
capture
systems
introduce
life‐cycle
emissions
of
their
own,
and
since
they
increase
the
amount
of
energy
needed
to
generate
each
kilowatt‐hour
(kWh)
of
electricity,
they
also
increase
the
emissions
at
other
stages
of
the
fuel
cycle
for
electricity.
In
this
paper
I
assess
the
complete
life‐cycle
emissions
of
several
cutting‐edge
power
generation
technologies:
state‐of‐the
art
combined‐cycle
natural
gas
turbine
(CCGT)
,
pulverized
coal
(PC)
and
integrated
gasification
combined
cycle
(IGCC)
coal
plants
(with
or
without
carbon
capture
and
sequestration
systems),
and
modern
wind
farms.
I
begin
in
Section
2
by
listing
the
stages
of
a
generic
life
cycle
for
power
plants,
and
then
developing
a
simple
model
based
on
these
stages,
excluding
carbon
capture
and
storage.
In
Sections
3
–
8,
I
review
previous
life‐cycle
studies
and
other
reports
to
estimate
realistic
emission
intensities
for
each
of
these
life‐cycle
stages.
Then,
in
Section
9,
I
extend
the
life‐cycle
model
to
include
the
effects
of
carbon
capture
and
sequestration
(CCS)
systems,
and
I
develop
estimates
of
the
parameters
needed
for
this
extended
model.
Section
10
pulls
together
the
modeling
framework
and
emission
intensities
from
the
previous
sections,
to
present
estimates
of
the
total
life‐cycle
emission
intensities
for
each
of
the
technologies
discussed
here.
Finally,
Section
11
summarizes
my
findings
and
briefly
discusses
their
policy
implications.
2. Power
Plant
Life
Cycle
Stages
The
process
of
producing
electricity
from
coal,
gas
or
wind
can
be
broken
down
into
several
stages,
each
of
which
generates
greenhouse
gas
emissions,
either
directly
or
indirectly.
For
this
paper,
I
divide
the
stages
into
three
categories:
1. Steps
related
to
the
production
or
combustion
of
fuel,
or
cleanup
of
pollutants
produced
as
a
result
of
fuel
combustion.
For
each
type
of
fuel
(coal
or
natural
gas),
the
emission
intensity
from
these
fuel‐cycle
steps
is
proportional
to
the
amount
of
fuel
that
is
consumed
by
the
power
plant.
For
example,
inefficient
coal
power
plants
will
require
more
coal
than
efficient
plants,
so
they
will
be
responsible
for
proportionately
more
emissions
during
the
coal
mining
stage.
Steps
included
in
this
category
are
a. fuel
extraction,
processing
and
delivery
b. methane
emissions
from
coal
mines
and
natural
gas
infrastructure
c. fuel
combustion
in
power
plants
d. production
of
materials
to
control
non‐CO2
pollutants
1
Life‐Cycle
Greenhouse
Gas
Emissions
from
Clean
Coal,
Clean
Gas
and
Wind
Generators
e. non‐CO2
greenhouse
gas
emissions
from
power
plants
2. Steps
related
to
the
construction
and
operation
of
the
power
plant,
and
not
tied
to
the
fuel
cycle.
These
steps
are
assumed
to
produce
a
fixed
amount
of
greenhouse
gas
emissions
per
kWh
of
electricity,
averaged
over
the
life
of
the
plant.
Steps
in
this
category
include
a. power
plant
construction
and
decommissioning
b. power
plant
operation
and
maintenance
3. Steps
related
to
the
capture
and
sequestration
of
CO2.
These
are
assumed
to
scale
up
or
down
depending
on
how
much
carbon
dioxide
is
captured
from
the
plant.
They
include
a. capture
of
CO2
in
the
power
plant
b. production
of
materials
used
in
the
CO2
capture
process
c. transport
and
storage
of
captured
CO2
The
greenhouse
gas
emissions
from
steps
in
category
1
differ
between
fuels
and
power
plant
designs,
but
for
each
basic
type
of
plant,
they
are
directly
proportional
to
the
amount
of
that
fuel
that
is
used
by
the
power
plant.
Consequently,
emissions
in
each
of
these
steps
would
be
expected
to
maintain
a
fixed
ratio
relative
to
each
other,
regardless
of
how
efficient
the
power
plant
is.
In
particular,
emissions
in
each
of
these
steps
are
expected
to
be
proportional
to
the
amount
of
carbon
dioxide
produced
during
combustion
in
the
power
plant.
This
makes
it
possible
to
use
a
simple
model
for
all
the
emissions
related
to
the
fuel
cycle
and
non‐CO2
pollution
cleanup:
That
is,
for
any
given
plant,
the
total
life‐cycle
emission
of
greenhouse
gases,
per
kilowatt
hour
of
electricity,
is
equal
to
the
amount
of
CO2
produced
directly
by
that
plant,
scaled
up
by
€ fixed
percentages
that
represent
all
the
other
greenhouse
gas
emissions
during
the
fuel
cycle.
These
ratios
differ
between
different
fossil
fuels
(coal
vs.
gas),
and
to
a
lesser
extent
between
different
types
of
plant
that
use
the
same
fuel.
However,
they
are
assumed
to
be
constant
for
plants
of
the
same
basic
type
(e.g.,
IGCC),
regardless
of
how
efficient
that
plant
is.
(i.e.,
each
individual
plant
may
have
a
different
“combustion
emissions”
value,
but
all
plants
of
the
same
type
will
share
the
same
“fuel
production
ratio,”
“methane
leakage
ratio,”
etc.)
It
should
be
noted
that
the
ratios
used
in
Equation
(1)
are
all
expressed
in
terms
of
global
warming
intensity,
e.g.,
the
methane
leakage
ratio
is
equal
to
the
ratio
between
the
grams
of
CO2‐equivalent
(gCO2e)
of
upstream
methane
leaks
and
the
number
of
grams
of
CO2
produced
during
combustion
in
the
power
plant.
In
this
case,
the
gCO2e
for
the
methane
would
be
25
times
higher
than
the
number
of
grams
of
methane
that
leaked,
because
methane
causes
25
times
more
radiative
forcing
than
carbon
dioxide
on
a
gram‐for‐gram
basis
(IPCC
2007:
212).
The
greenhouse
gas
emissions
from
steps
in
category
2
are
generally
reported
in
units
of
grams
of
CO2‐equivalent
per
kilowatt
hour
of
electricity
produced,
over
the
life
of
the
plant
(gCO2e/kWh).
They
may
differ
from
one
type
of
power
plant
to
another,
but
are
assumed
to
be
constant
for
different
plants
of
the
same
basic
type.
Adding
these
emissions
to
the
fuel‐cycle
2
Life‐Cycle
Greenhouse
Gas
Emissions
from
Clean
Coal,
Clean
Gas
and
Wind
Generators
emission
shown
in
Equation
(1)
gives
a
complete
model
for
all
power
plant
emissions,
at
least
for
power
plants
that
do
not
use
carbon
capture
and
sequestration.
In
Sections
3
‐
8
I
estimate
the
appropriate
emission
factors
for
each
of
the
stages
shown
in
Equations
(1)
and
(2).
Then
in
Section
9
I
use
this
model
(and
the
more
complete
one
for
CCS
systems)
to
calculate
the
total
life‐cycle
emissions
for
wind
farms
and
several
types
of
coal
and
natural
gas
power
plants.
3. Fuel
Combustion
Most
of
the
greenhouse
gas
emissions
from
coal
and
gas
power
plants
are
in
the
form
of
carbon
dioxide
that
is
produced
when
hydrocarbon
fuels
are
combusted
in
the
power
plant.
The
emissions
produced
by
combustion
of
fuel
per
kWh
of
electricity
can
be
calculated
via
Equation
(3):
combustion emissions ( g CO 2
kWh electricity ) = fuel carbon intensity ( kg CO 2
MBtu heat )×( 1000 g
kg )×( 1 MBtu
10 6 Btu )
(3)
× power plant heat rate ( Btu heat
)
kWh electricity
That
is,
the
amount
of
carbon
dioxide
produced
per
kWh
of
electricity
due
to
combustion
of
fuel
is
simply
the
product
of
the
carbon
intensity
of
the
fuel,
and
the
heat
rate
of
the
plant
(the
€ amount
of
fuel
needed
per
kWh
of
electricity
generated),
with
appropriate
conversion
factors.
These
factors
are
discussed
in
the
following
two
sections.
3.1. Fuel
Carbon
Intensity
The
carbon
intensity
of
natural
gas
and
coal
varies
depending
on
the
exact
composition
of
the
fuel.
For
this
paper,
I
assume
that
electric
plants
use
the
average
mix
of
fuel
supplied
to
electric
plants
in
the
U.S.,
as
reported
in
the
EPA’s
greenhouse
gas
inventory
for
2007(EPA
2009b,
§
2.2).
These
values
are
shown
in
Table
1.
They
have
not
varied
significantly
in
recent
years.
Table
1.
Carbon
intensity
of
fossil
fuels
supplied
to
U.S.
electric
utilities
Fuel
Carbon
intensity
(kg
CO2/MBtu)
Natural
gas
53.1
Coal
94.5
(EPA
2009b,
§
2.2)
3
Life‐Cycle
Greenhouse
Gas
Emissions
from
Clean
Coal,
Clean
Gas
and
Wind
Generators
3.2. Power
Plant
Heat
Rates
The
heat
rate
of
fossil‐fuelled
power
plants
is
a
measure
of
their
efficiency
–
lower
values
indicate
more
efficient
plants
(a
100%
efficient
plant
would
have
a
heat
rate
of
3413
Btu/kWh).
The
heat
rate
varies
widely
among
power
plants,
and
strongly
affects
the
amount
of
carbon
dioxide
released
per
unit
of
electricity
generated.
In
this
paper,
I
assume
that
new
fossil‐fuelled
plants
would
have
the
heat
rates
reported
by
the
U.S.
Energy
Information
Administration
(EIA)
for
state‐of‐the‐art
plants
that
could
have
begun
construction
in
2008
(EIA
2009a).1
These
are
shown
in
Table
2,
along
with
the
average
heat
rate
for
existing
coal
and
natural
gas
power
plants.
Table
2.
Heat
rate
and
emissions
intensity
of
U.S.
fossil‐fuelled
power
plants
Fuel
Technology
Heat
ratea
Combustion
(Btu/kWh)
emissionsb
(gCO2/kWh
)
Coal
New
pulverized
coal
(PC)
8,740
826
Coal
New
integrated
coal‐gasification
combined
cycle
7,450
704
(IGCC)
Coal
Existing
U.S.
coal‐fired
power
plants
10,326
975
Natural
gas
Advanced
combined
cycle
gas
turbines
(CCGT)
6,333
336
Natural
gas
Existing
U.S.
combined
cycle
gas
turbines
(CCGTs)
7,483
397
a
Based
on
higher
heating
value
of
fuel.
Existing
plants
calculated
from
EIA
(2009b);
new
plants
from
EIA
(2009a)
b
calculated
using
Equation
(3)
with
data
from
Table
1
For
comparison,
Table
3
shows
the
heat
rate
reported
for
fossil‐fuelled
power
plants
in
a
number
of
previous
life‐cycle
studies.
The
reference
heat
rate
for
new
pulverized
coal
power
plants
PC
plants
(8,740
Btu/kWh)
falls
roughly
in
the
middle
of
all
the
designs
that
were
assessed,
or
on
the
low
end
if
hypothetical,
future
designs
for
2020
are
ignored.
The
reference
values
for
IGCC
and
CCGT
plants
are
lower
than
assumed
in
most
other
life‐cycle
studies
of
the
same
type
of
plant,
but
that
may
be
appropriate
for
this
paper,
given
that
heat
rates
are
expected
to
decline
in
the
future.
Table
3.
Heat
rates
for
coal
and
natural
gas
power
plants
reported
in
previous
life‐cycle
studies
Technology
Study
Notes
Heat
Ratea
(Btu/kWh)
PC
(Spath
and
Mann
2004)
11,851
(Spath
et
al.
1999)
US
average
10,666
(Koornneef
et
al.
2008)
Netherlands
avg.
10,158
(Spath
et
al.
1999)
9,751
(Odeh
and
Cockerill
2008b)
subcritical
9,669
(Hondo
2005)
9,274
(Berry
et
al.
1998)
9,101
(Tahara
et
al.
1997)
8,751
(Pacca
and
Horvath
2002)
8,751
(Odeh
and
Cockerill
2008b)
supercritical
8,619
(Proops
et
al.
1996)
supercritical
8,126
1
The
EIA
estimates
heat
rates
for
prototype
plants
and
for
“nth‐of‐a‐kind”
plants
that
could
eventually
be
built
once
each
technology
matures.
In
this
paper
I
use
the
nth‐of‐a‐kind
heat
rates.
4
Life‐Cycle
Greenhouse
Gas
Emissions
from
Clean
Coal,
Clean
Gas
and
Wind
Generators
4. Fuel
Production
and
Delivery
Substantial
amounts
of
energy
are
used
to
extract
coal
or
gas
from
the
ground,
prepare
these
fuels
for
combustion,
and
deliver
them
to
the
power
plant.
These
emissions
have
been
assessed
in
many
previous
studies,
several
of
which
are
shown
in
Table
4.
During
the
extraction
phase,
greenhouse
gas
emissions
result
from
burning
fuel
to
operate
mining
equipment,
as
well
as
further
upstream,
in
the
process
of
making
the
equipment
used
for
mining
or
drilling.
Estimates
of
these
emissions
vary
significantly,
depending
on
the
conditions
in
which
the
fuel
is
found
(e.g.,
above
ground
or
underground
coal
mines),
the
condition
of
the
fuel
(e.g.,
how
much
CO2
must
be
rejected
from
natural
gas
to
prepare
it
for
the
pipeline).
Estimates
can
also
vary
depending
on
the
methods
used
by
researchers.
5
Life‐Cycle
Greenhouse
Gas
Emissions
from
Clean
Coal,
Clean
Gas
and
Wind
Generators
Emission
estimates
for
the
process
of
transporting
fuel
to
the
power
plant
also
vary
significantly.
These
can
be
affected
by
the
distance
the
fuel
must
travel,
as
well
as
the
methods
used
to
get
it
there
(pipeline,
barge,
train,
etc.).
The
estimates
of
the
combined
emissions
due
to
extraction
and
transport
in
Table
4
range
from
0.7
to
12.4
percent
of
the
direct
emissions
when
coal
is
burned,
or
2.0
to
18.2
percent
of
the
direct
emissions
when
natural
gas
is
burned.
It
is
not
clear
which
of
these
estimates
is
most
“typical”
for
coal
or
gas
plants
in
the
U.S.,
so
I
will
adopt
the
median
values
among
these
studies
as
my
reference
value.
These
are
marked
with
bold
type
in
Table
4
(4.2
percent
of
the
combustion
emissions
for
coal,
and
13.1
percent
of
the
combustion
emissions
for
natural
gas,
which
is
considered
an
average
value
for
European
power
plants).
Table
4.
Greenhouse
gas
emissions
due
to
extraction
and
transport
of
fossil
fuels
Fuel
Study
Extraction
Transport
Total
Note
(ratio
vs.
(ratio
vs.
(ratio
vs.
combustion)
combustion)
combustion)
Coal
(Mayer‐Spohn
and
0.7%
incl
in
extr.
0.7%
lignite
Blesl
2007)
(Ruether
et
al.
2004)
0.6%
0.3%
0.8%
(Viebahn
et
al.
2007)
2.1%
incl
in
extr.
2.1%
lignite
(Berry
et
al.
1998)
2.2%
0.1%
2.4%
UK
(Hondo
2005)
1.1%
1.8%
2.9%
imported
to
Japan
(Spath
et
al.
1999)
1.2%
1.8%
3.0%
Illinois,
underground
(Mayer‐Spohn
and
4.2%
incl
in
extr.
4.2%
anthracite
Blesl
2007)
(Viebahn
et
al.
2007)
5.1%
incl
in
extr.
5.1%
anthracite
(Spath
and
Mann
5.9%
incl
in
extr.
5.9%
2004)
(Koornneef
et
al.
1.8%
6.0%
7.8%
Netherland
2008)
mix
(Nomura
et
al.
2001)
6.1%
2.3%
8.4%
imported
to
Japan
from
China
(Proops
et
al.
1996)
9.9%
incl
in
extr.
9.9%
(Proops
et
al.
1996)
12.4%
incl
in
extr.
12.4%
Gas
(Berry
et
al.
1998)
1.5%
0.5%
2.0%
direct
from
North
Sea
(Dones
et
al.
2005)
2.1%
2.3%
4.3%
Netherlands
mix
(Nomura
et
al.
2001)
8.7%
1.8%
10.4%
LNG
to
Japan
(Proops
et
al.
1996)
11.0%
incl
in
extr.
11.0%
UK
(Viebahn
et
al.
2007)
11.7%
incl
in
extr.
11.7%
Germany
(Dones
et
al.
2005)
3.7%
9.3%
13.1%
European
average
(Mayer‐Spohn
and
13.4%
incl
in
extr.
13.4%
Blesl
2007)
(Dones
et
al.
2005)
4.5%
10.5%
14.9%
Italy
mix
6
Life‐Cycle
Greenhouse
Gas
Emissions
from
Clean
Coal,
Clean
Gas
and
Wind
Generators
5. Methane
Emissions
Methane
is
a
potent
greenhouse
gas,
causing
25
times
more
radiative
forcing
than
carbon
dioxide
on
a
ton‐for‐ton
basis
(IPCC
2007:
212).
The
production
and
transport
stages
of
both
coal
and
natural
gas
cause
releases
of
methane,
and
these
releases
are
among
the
most
significant
greenhouse
gas
emissions
for
coal
and
gas
power
other
than
the
carbon
dioxide
released
during
fuel
combustion.
5.1. Coal
Mines
When
biomass
is
converted
to
coal,
some
of
the
biomass
is
also
converted
to
methane,
which
remains
embedded
in
the
coal
until
it
is
disturbed.
Much
of
this
methane
is
released
to
the
atmosphere
as
a
result
of
coal
mining.
Underground
coal
seams
tend
to
contain
more
methane
than
surface
seams,
and
consequently
more
methane
is
released
per
ton
of
coal
from
underground
mines
than
from
surface
mines.
Methane
content
also
varies
among
different
coal
formations,
whether
they
are
above
or
below
ground
(Longwell
and
Rubin
1995;
Ruether
et
al.
2004).
Although
methane
is
a
potentially
valuable
fuel,
these
emissions
have
so
far
proven
difficult
to
capture:
surface
mines
are
an
open
environment
where
methane
does
not
achieve
high
enough
concentration
to
be
easily
collected,
and
underground
mines
must
be
constantly
ventilated
to
prevent
dangerous
build‐up
of
methane
–
which
in
turn
means
that
methane
in
the
exhaust
air
is
too
diluted
to
collect
easily.
Coal
mining
in
the
U.S.
in
2007
generated
about
0.116
kg
of
methane
emissions
per
million
Btu
worth
of
coal
produced.
Applying
a
GWP
of
25
yields
an
average
release
of
methane
of
2.89
kg
CO2e
per
million
Btu
of
heat.2
As
noted
previously
in
Table
1,
the
coal
used
for
electricity
production
in
the
U.S.
in
2007
produced
about
94.5
kgCO2
per
million
Btu
of
heat.
The
ratio
between
these
two
values
(2.89/94.5)
indicates
that
emissions
of
methane
from
coal
mines
are
equivalent
to
about
3.1
percent
of
the
direct
emissions
released
when
coal
is
combusted.
For
the
reference
coal
plants
assessed
in
this
paper,
I
adopt
the
assumption
that
coal
mining
causes
upstream
methane
emissions
equivalent
to
3.1
percent
of
the
carbon
dioxide
produced
when
the
fuel
is
combusted.
This
ratio
has
fallen
in
recent
years,
as
U.S.
coal
production
has
shifted
from
underground
to
aboveground
mines,
and
as
underground
mining
has
shifted
from
more
“gassy”
sites
to
less
“gassy”
ones
(EPA
2009c).
Figure
1
shows
the
U.S.
trend
between
1990
and
2007.
2
The
U.S.
produced
1.145
billion
short
tons
of
coal
in
2007
(EPA
2009c,
Table
A‐104).
When
combusted,
this
coal
produced
23.3
quadrillion
Btu
of
heat
(at
20.3
million
Btu
per
short
ton)(EIA
2008,
Table
A5).
The
mining
of
this
coal
led
to
the
release
of
2.74
million
metric
tons
of
methane
(EPA
2009a,
Table
3‐2).
7
Life‐Cycle
Greenhouse
Gas
Emissions
from
Clean
Coal,
Clean
Gas
and
Wind
Generators
The
EPA
indicates
that
methane
emissions
from
coal
mines
could
be
24
percent
higher
or
16
percent
lower
than
the
figure
cited
above
(using
a
95
percent
confidence
interval).
This
suggests
that
methane
emissions
from
coal
mines
could
be
around
2.6
to
3.8
percent
of
the
direct
emissions
from
combusting
the
coal.
0.07
tonnes
CH4
(tCO2e)
per
tonne
CO2
(tCO2)
0.06
0.05
0.04
0.03
0.02
0.01
0
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1997
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2007
1996
1998
2006
Year
Figure
1.
Ratio
between
CH4
emissions
from
U.S.
coal
mines
and
CO2
emissions
from
coal
combustion
5.2. Natural
Gas
Infrastructure
In
1996,
the
U.S.
EPA
published
the
results
of
a
major
study
of
methane
leakage
from
the
U.S.
natural
gas
system
(Harrison
et
al.
1997).
They
found
that
about
1.4
percent
±
0.5
percent
of
gross
natural
gas
production
escaped
to
the
atmosphere
before
reaching
its
final
destination.
The
main
sources
of
these
emissions
are
small
leaks
throughout
the
system
(0.67%),
venting
from
pneumatic
devices
(0.20%),
venting
from
regulators
and
meters
(0.14%),
maintenance
operations
(0.08%)
and
compressor
exhaust
(0.08%);
other
sources
total
0.22%.
Kirchgessner
(1997)
reports
that
other
studies
have
typically
estimated
U.S.
gas
leakage
rates
between
1
and
4
percent,
or
possibly
higher
if
flaring
and
venting
are
included.
Harrison
(1997)
do
not
discuss
venting
or
flaring
at
the
wellhead.
For
this
paper,
I
assume
that
1.4
percent
of
natural
gas
is
emitted
to
the
atmosphere
before
reaching
final
customers.
Thus,
for
every
100
tons
of
natural
gas
that
is
produced,
1.4
tons
are
lost
and
98.6
tons
reach
customers.
Natural
gas
is
about
95
percent
methane
(EPA
2009b:
A‐51),
so
this
means
about
1.33
tons
of
methane
(equivalent
to
33.3
tCO2e)
are
released
for
every
98.6
tons
of
natural
gas
that
reach
customers.
The
98.6
tons
of
natural
gas
that
reach
customers
produce
267.5
tons
of
carbon
dioxide
when
combusted
(at
a
rate
of
2.72
tons
of
carbon
dioxide
per
ton
of
natural
gas).3
Taking
the
ratio
of
emissions
due
to
leaks
and
due
to
direct
combustion
gives
33.3/267.5
=
0.124.
3
U.S.
pipeline
natural
gas
contains
about
95%
methane
(which
produces
44
tons
of
CO
2
per
16
tons
ton
of
fuel)
and
3.6%
ethane
higher
hydrocarbons
(which
produce
about
44
tons
of
CO2
per
15
tons
of
fuel)(EPA
8
Life‐Cycle
Greenhouse
Gas
Emissions
from
Clean
Coal,
Clean
Gas
and
Wind
Generators
For
this
paper,
I
assume
that
upstream
methane
leakages
have
an
impact
on
climate
equal
to
12.4
percent
of
the
emissions
due
to
combustion
of
natural
gas.
Dones
(2005)
estimate
leakage
rates
of
0.1–1.4
percent
for
European
countries,
averaging
0.7
percent.
With
a
GWP
of
25,
methane
leakage
in
this
study
corresponds
to
about
1‐13%
of
the
direct
emissions
from
combustion,
averaging
6.3%.
Methane
leakage
is
highest
for
Austria,
which
obtains
most
of
its
natural
gas
from
the
Russian
Federation.
Similarly,
Lelieveld
(2005)
report
leakage
of
1.4
percent
from
Russian
pipelines
connecting
to
western
Europe.
Berry
(1998:
90)
reports
that
methane
leakage
in
the
UK
has
been
estimated
at
2‐11%
in
previous
studies,
but
these
estimates
may
include
a
certain
amount
of
theft.
More
reliable
industry
estimates
are
around
0.9‐1%,
mostly
from
the
older,
low‐pressure
distribution
system.
For
a
power
plant
connected
by
new,
high‐pressure
pipelines
to
a
North
Sea
gas
platform,
Berry
estimates
total
leakage
around
0.19
percent,
with
a
climate
impact
equivalent
to
1.7
percent
of
the
direct
emissions
from
combusting
the
fuel.
6. Non‐Carbon
Dioxide
Emissions
Control
and
Emissions
6.1. Emissions
Control
U.S.
power
plants
must
control
emissions
of
a
number
of
pollutants,
notably
nitrogen
(NOx)
and
sulfur
(SOx)
compounds.
NOx
emissions
from
coal
and
gas
power
plants
are
generally
removed
from
the
exhaust
stream
by
use
of
selective
catalytic
reduction,
a
process
which
consumes
significant
amounts
of
ammonia.
SOx
emissions
from
coal
plants
are
controlled
via
flue‐gas
desulfurization,
a
process
which
generally
uses
significant
amounts
of
limestone
or
lime.
Substantial
amounts
of
energy
are
needed
to
prepare
these
materials,
particularly
limestone
or
lime
for
coal
plants.
The
desulfurizing
reaction
also
produces
significant
amounts
of
carbon
dioxide
(Spath
et
al.
1999)
Most
previous
life‐cycle
studies
give
little
attention
to
the
greenhouse
gas
emissions
generated
when
ammonia
and
limestone
are
prepared
and
used
for
power
plants.
However,
several
that
do
investigate
this
are
shown
in
Table
5,
with
the
emissions
from
the
pollution
control
system
shown
as
a
ratio
versus
the
direct
emissions
from
fuel
combustion.
For
this
study,
I
use
the
emission
rates
highlighted
in
bold
text
in
Table
5.
For
PC
plants,
Spath
(1999)
appears
to
provide
an
estimate
that
most
closely
matches
the
context
of
this
paper
(a
new
plant
meeting
New
Source
Performance
Standards),
although
this
also
has
the
highest
upstream
emissions
of
the
four
cases
presented.
For
IGCC
and
CCGT
plants,
only
one
study
estimated
the
greenhouse
gas
emissions
due
to
the
pollution
control
system.
2009b:
A‐52).
Summing
0.95
x
44/16
+
0.036
x
44/15
gives
a
weighted
average
of
2.72
tons
CO2
per
ton
of
natural
gas.
9
Life‐Cycle
Greenhouse
Gas
Emissions
from
Clean
Coal,
Clean
Gas
and
Wind
Generators
Table
5.
Greenhouse
gas
emissions
due
to
production
and
use
of
ammonia
and
lime/limestone
for
fossil‐fuelled
plants
Technology
Study
Emissions
Notes
from
pollution
control
materials
(ratio
vs.
combustion)
PC
(Berry
et
al.
1998)
0.8%
(Odeh
and
Cockerill
3.9%
2008a)
(Spath
et
al.
1999)
4.3%
US
average
6.2. Non‐CO2
Greenhouse
Gas
Emissions
Coal
and
gas
power
plants
produce
some
other
greenhouse
gases
in
addition
to
their
carbon
dioxide
emissions.
The
most
significant
of
these
are
N2O
and
methane.
Several
of
the
studies
reviewed
for
this
paper
assessed
N2O
emissions;
their
findings
are
shown
in
Table
6.
For
this
paper,
I
use
the
median
value
reported
for
each
technology,
and
assume
that
climate
impact
of
N2O
emissions
from
PC,
IGCC
and
CCGT
plants
are
equal
to
1.7%,
1.0%
and
0.8%,
respectively,
of
the
combustion
emissions
from
these
plants.
Table
6.
N2O
emissions
due
to
production
and
use
of
ammonia
and
lime/limestone
for
fossil‐
fuelled
plants
Technology
Study
N2O
emissions
(tCO2e,
ratio
vs
combustion)
10
Life‐Cycle
Greenhouse
Gas
Emissions
from
Clean
Coal,
Clean
Gas
and
Wind
Generators
(Mayer‐Spohn
and
Blesl
1.2%
2007)
CCGT
(Spath
and
Mann
2000)
0.1%
(Mayer‐Spohn
and
Blesl
0.8%
2007)
(Berry
et
al.
1998)
1.0%
Coal
plants
also
release
some
methane
in
their
exhaust,
due
to
incomplete
combustion
of
the
fuel.
This
effect
was
not
explicitly
estimated
in
any
of
the
life‐cycle
studies
reviewed
for
this
paper,
so
I
do
not
attempt
to
quantify
it.
7. Power
Plant
Construction
and
Decommissioning
7.1. Fossil
Plants
Table
7
shows
estimates
of
the
direct
and
indirect
emissions
due
to
construction
and
decommissioning
of
coal
and
natural
gas
power
plants,
reported
by
several
previous
life‐cycle
studies.
In
general,
the
more
detailed
studies
find
higher
emissions
for
these
phases.
So
for
this
paper,
I
adopt
the
construction‐phase
estimates
by
Spath
(2000;
1999)
for
PC
and
CCGT
plants,
and
by
Reuther
(2004)
for
IGCC
plants.
These
have
been
highlighted
in
bold
text
in
the
table.
Previous
studies
gave
little
attention
to
the
emissions
caused
by
decommissioning
of
power
plants.
For
this
paper,
I
adopt
an
estimate
of
0.1
gCO2e/kWh
for
this
phase
for
all
three
fossil
technologies.
11
Life‐Cycle
Greenhouse
Gas
Emissions
from
Clean
Coal,
Clean
Gas
and
Wind
Generators
Table
7.
Greenhouse
gas
emissions
due
to
construction
and
decommissioning
of
fossil
power
plants
Tech‐ Study
Manufact.
/
Plant
nology
construction
decommis‐
(gCO2e/kWh)
sioning
(gCO2e/kWh)
7.2. Wind
Farms
More
attention
has
been
given
to
the
emissions
due
to
manufacturing,
installation
and
decommissioning
of
wind
farms.
Table
8
shows
estimates
from
several
dozen
on
this
topic.
However,
many
of
the
available
studies
are
based
on
outdated
(sub‐megawatt)
wind
turbine
designs
and/or
envision
offshore
wind
farms.
This
study
is
intended
to
focus
on
the
potential
12
Life‐Cycle
Greenhouse
Gas
Emissions
from
Clean
Coal,
Clean
Gas
and
Wind
Generators
emissions
due
to
current‐generation
on‐shore
wind
farms,
so
the
ten
studies
that
assess
current‐generation
turbines
for
on‐shore
use
are
shown
with
bold
text
in
Table
8.
Unfortunately,
even
these
studies
produce
dramatically
varying
estimates
of
the
net
greenhouse
gas
emissions
for
construction
and
decommissioning
of
wind
farms.
For
example,
some
account
for
the
use
of
recycled
steel
and
other
metals
during
the
manufacturing/construction
phase,
while
others
treat
it
as
a
“negative”
emission
during
the
decommissioning
phase,
while
others
do
not
account
for
it
at
all.
These
ten
studies
report
a
range
of
net
emissions
from
4.9
to
12.0
gCO2e/kWh,
with
a
median
of
7.1
gCO2e/kWh.
As
a
conservative
estimate,
I
will
assume
that
building
and
decommissioning
farms
produce
a
net
release
of
10
gCO2e/kWh.
Table
8.
Greenhouse
gas
emissions
due
to
construction
and
decommissioning
of
fossil
power
plants
Study
Year
of
Manufact‐ Decom‐ Technology
Install‐ uring
and
mission‐
ation
construc‐ ing
tion
(gCO2e
/
(gCO2e
/
kWh)
kWh)
(Lenzen
and
Wachsmann
2000
2.6
600
kW,
55m
coastal
site
2004)
(Lenzen
and
Wachsmann
2000
4.2
600
kW,
65m
inland
site
2004)
(Mayer‐Spohn
and
Blesl
2007
4.2
0.1
off‐shore
2007)
(Lenzen
and
Wachsmann
2000
4.5
600
kW,
55m
coastal
site
2004)
(Vestas
2006b)
2006
10.9
6.0
onshore,
105
m,
vestas
v90
(MayerSpohn
and
Blesl
2007
4.7
0.3
onshore
2007)
(Vestas
2006b)
2006
9.5
‐4.1
offshore,
80
m,
vestas
v90
(Elsam
2004)
2004
36.7
30.3
onshore,
78
m
tower,
vestas
v80
(Frankl
2004)
2004
6.3
0.7
vestas,
on
shore,
37m
(Norton
1999)
1999
6.59.1
UK,
materials
only
(Vestas
2006a)
2006
10.5
3.5
onshore,
80
m,
vestas
v82
(Elsam
2004)
2004
34.0
‐26.8
offshore,
60
m
tower,
vestas
v80
(Frankl
2004)
2004
6.7
0.6
onshore,
tubular
60m,
deep
foundation
(Lenzen
and
Wachsmann
2000
7.3
600
kW,
65m
inland
site
2004)
(Frankl
2004)
2007
8.0
0.2
onshore,
124m
tower,
like
Enercon
E112
(prototype)
(Frankl
2004)
2004
7.3
0.6
offshore,
25
km,
lattice
100m,
tripod
(Frankl
2004)
2004
8.3
0.5
offshore,
25
km,
tubular
60m,
caisson
13
Life‐Cycle
Greenhouse
Gas
Emissions
from
Clean
Coal,
Clean
Gas
and
Wind
Generators
8. Power
Plant
Operation
and
Maintenance
8.1. Coal
and
Natural
Gas
Plants
I
have
identified
only
two
life‐cycle
studies
that
attempt
to
quantify
the
greenhouse
gas
emissions
due
to
operation
and
maintenance
of
fossil‐fuelled
power
plants.
An
early
paper
by
Kreith
(1990)
estimates
that
maintenance
of
a
fluidized‐bed
coal
plant
would
cause
28
gCO2e/kWh
of
emissions,
and
Ruether
(2004)
estimates
that
6.9
gCO2e/kWh
would
be
released
during
operation
and
maintenance
of
an
IGCC
coal
plant
in
the
U.S.
No
available
studies
estimate
the
impact
of
operation
and
maintenance
of
natural
gas
plants.
Consequently,
for
this
paper
I
assume
that
operation
and
maintenance
activities
at
all
coal
or
gas
plants
produce
6.9
gCO2e/kWh
of
emissions.
8.2. Wind
Farms
Three
studies
estimate
the
greenhouse
gas
emissions
due
to
operation
and
maintenance
of
wind
farms.
These
are
summarized
in
Table
X.
Estimates
of
the
impact
of
operation
and
14
Life‐Cycle
Greenhouse
Gas
Emissions
from
Clean
Coal,
Clean
Gas
and
Wind
Generators
maintenance
of
onshore
wind
farms
range
from
zero
to
0.79
gCO2e/kWh.
For
this
study,
I
will
assume
a
value
of
0.63
gCO2e/kWh,
which
is
the
median
of
the
estimates
for
on‐shore
sites.
Table
9.
Greenhouse
gas
emissions
due
to
construction
and
decommissioning
of
fossil
power
plants
Study
plant
Technology
maintenance
(Vestas
2006a)
0.00
onshore,
80
m,
vestas
v82
9. Carbon
Capture
and
Sequestration
In
recent
years,
much
attention
has
been
given
to
the
possibility
of
using
carbon
capture
and
sequestration
(CCS)
systems
to
collect
carbon
dioxide
from
power
plants,
either
before
or
after
the
main
combustion
cycle,
and
then
store
it
in
underground
or
deep‐sea
reservoirs.
CCS
systems
are
now
at
the
prototype
stage,
and
several
studies
have
been
published
assessing
their
effect
on
energy
and
emissions.
9.1. Emissions
from
Carbon
Capture
System
In
this
paper,
I
consider
CCS
systems
based
on
amine
absorption
of
CO2
for
PC
and
CCGT
power
plants,
and
a
system
based
on
pre‐combustion
Rectisol
absorption
for
IGCC
plants.
Both
15
Life‐Cycle
Greenhouse
Gas
Emissions
from
Clean
Coal,
Clean
Gas
and
Wind
Generators
types
of
system
would
remove
90
percent
of
the
carbon
dioxide
that
would
otherwise
be
emitted
by
the
power
plant.
Although
they
are
highly
effective
at
removing
carbon
dioxide
from
the
power
plant’s
exhaust,
CCS
systems
also
generate
some
greenhouse
gas
emissions
of
their
own.
The
most
significant
of
these
occur
during
production
of
the
solvents
used
for
these
systems.
Additional
energy
is
also
needed
for
compression
and
transport
of
captured
CO2
(possibly
causing
upstream
emissions
of
CO2,
depending
on
the
accounting
system),
and
some
of
the
captured
CO2
may
be
released
during
transport
or
after
storage.
Table
10
shows
the
amount
of
emissions
from
several
studies
of
similar
plants,
during
each
of
these
stages.
The
Viebahn
(2007)
study
investigates
plants
that
are
most
similar
to
the
reference
design
for
this
paper,
so
I
adopt
their
estimate
for
each
technology.
However,
one
adjustment
must
be
made
to
these
values.
In
the
next
section,
extra
energy
required
within
the
plant
to
run
the
CO2
capture
system
(including
compression
of
the
captured
CO2)
will
be
incorporated
into
an
adjustment
for
the
plant’s
overall
efficiency.
Therefore,
emissions
associated
with
the
compression
of
captured
CO2
should
not
be
incorporated
here.
The
extra
energy
required
for
compressing
CO2
amounts
to
about
1
percent
of
the
plant’s
gross
output
(i.e.,
it
is
responsible
for
about
1%
of
the
plant’s
combustion‐based
emissions).
With
this
factor
removed
from
the
CCS‐related
CO2
emissions,
I
obtain
reference
values
for
CCS‐related
CO2
emissions
of
4.4
percent,
3.1
percent
and
3.7
percent
for
PC,
IGCC
and
CCGT
plants,
respectively.
These
values
are
given
as
ratios
relative
to
the
carbon
dioxide
produced
during
fuel
combustion.
Table
10.
Life‐cycle
greenhouse
gas
emissions
from
carbon
dioxide
capture
systems
(ratio
vs.
combustion
emissions)
Technology
Study
Solvent
CO2
CO2
leakage
Total
CCS‐
production
compression
related
/
transport
/
emissions
storage
PC+CCS
(Spath
and
not
shown
0.1%
0.4%
n.a.
Mann
2004)
(Koornneef
et
al.
1.3%
0.1%
0.0%
1.4%
2008)
(Odeh
and
1.4%
0.8%
incl.
in
2.2%
Cockerill
2008b)
transp.
(Odeh
and
2.2%
incl.
in
captr.
incl.
in
captr.
2.2%
Cockerill
2008b)
(Viebahn
et
al.
3.4%a
2.0%a
0.0%
5.4%
2007)
IGCC+CCS
(Odeh
and
~0%
incl.
in
captr.
incl.
in
captr.
0.0%
Cockerill
2008b)
(Viebahn
et
al.
2.3%a
1.8%a
0.0%
4.1%
2007)
CCGT+CCS
(Spath
and
not
shown
0.1%
0.3%
n.a.
Mann
2004)
(Viebahn
et
al.
2.6%a
2.1%a
0.0%
4.7%
2007)
(Odeh
and
6.4%
incl.
in
captr.
incl.
in
captr.
6.4%
Cockerill
2008b)
a
energy
for
compression
of
CO2
is
included
in
“CO2
capture
materials”
column
16
Life‐Cycle
Greenhouse
Gas
Emissions
from
Clean
Coal,
Clean
Gas
and
Wind
Generators
9.2. Effect
of
Carbon
Capture
System
on
Power
Plant
Efficiency
CCS
systems
require
energy
in
the
form
of
both
heat
and
electricity,
in
order
to
cool
flue
gases
to
allow
absorption
of
CO2,
heat
solvents
to
release
CO2,
move
solvents
and
flue
gases
through
the
system,
compress
collected
CO2,
etc.
The
Intergovernmental
Panel
on
Climate
Change
has
reviewed
previous
studies
of
the
performance
of
potential
CCS
systems,
and
identified
ranges
and
representative
values
for
the
amount
by
which
these
systems
increase
energy
requirements
for
various
types
of
power
plant
(IPCC
2005).
These
values
are
shown
in
Table
11.
For
this
paper,
I
adopt
the
IPCC’s
representative
value
for
each
type
of
power
plant.
Table
11.
Increase
in
energy
requirements
of
coal
and
gas
plants
due
to
carbon
capture
and
sequestration
Technology
Low
High
Representative
value
PC
24%
40%
31%
IGCC
14%
25%
19%
NGCC
11%
22%
16%
(IPCC
2005:
343)
9.3. Life‐Cycle
Emission
Model,
Including
Carbon
Capture
I
now
extend
the
model
given
in
Equations
(1)
and
(2),
to
incorporate
the
effects
of
CCS
systems
on
the
life‐cycle
emissions
of
coal
and
gas
power
plants.
The
first
change
reflects
the
fact
that
emissions
due
to
the
CCS
system
are
proportional
to
the
amount
of
CO2
that
is
generated
during
combustion
in
the
power
plant.
Consequently,
two
terms
can
be
added
to
Equation
(1),
reflecting
the
carbon
captured
by
the
CCS
system
and
the
amount
of
increased
emissions
due
to
the
CCS
system.
The
modified
equation
becomes
Here,
the
“sequestration
ratio”
is
90
percent
of
combustion‐based
CO2,
and
CCS
system
emissions
are
given
for
each
type
of
plant
in
Section
9.1.
€
The
second
adjustment
accounts
for
the
change
in
the
plant’s
net
efficiency
due
to
addition
of
the
CCS
system.
This
has
two
effects.
First,
power
plants
with
CCS
systems
must
consume
more
fuel
in
order
to
produce
each
kWh
of
useful
output,
in
a
proportion
equal
to
the
extra
energy
requirements
shown
in
Table
11.
Second,
much
of
the
power
plant’s
infrastructure
must
be
devoted
to
producing
energy
for
the
CCS
system,
which
means
that
emissions
per
kWh
due
to
construction/decommissioning
and
operation/maintenance
of
the
plant
must
also
be
scaled
up.
If
the
CCS
system
needed
all
of
its
energy
in
the
form
of
electricity,
then
it
would
be
reasonable
to
assume
that
the
construction
17
Life‐Cycle
Greenhouse
Gas
Emissions
from
Clean
Coal,
Clean
Gas
and
Wind
Generators
and
O&M
emissions
must
scale
up
by
the
same
factor
as
the
fuel
consumption
(neglecting
the
extra
emissions
due
to
construction
and
maintenance
of
the
CCS
system
itself).
However,
in
reality,
most
of
the
extra
energy
for
CCS
systems
is
supplied
in
the
form
of
heat
(IPCC
2005:
117),
so
the
electrical
components
need
not
be
scaled
up
as
much
as
the
thermal
components
to
accommodate
the
CCS
system.
On
the
other
hand,
the
CCS
system
is
likely
to
add
significant
equipment
and
operating
impacts
of
its
own
to
the
plant.
So,
for
the
purpose
of
this
paper,
I
adopt
the
simplifying
assumption
that
plant‐related
emissions
(construction
and
O&M)
per
useful
kWh
rise
by
the
same
share
as
the
fuel
consumption
increases.
That
is,
I
assume
that
the
equipment
and
maintenance
needed
to
fuel
and
run
the
CCS
system
have
similar
emission
intensities
(per
unit
of
fuel
input)
as
the
original
power
plant.
With these adjustments, Equation (2) becomes
10. Total
Life‐Cycle
Emissions
from
Power
Plants
Tables
12–14
gather
together
all
the
parameters
for
coal,
gas
and
wind
power
plants
that
have
been
presented
earlier
in
this
paper.
Table
12.
Fuel‐cycle
related
emissions
for
fossil‐fuelled
power
plants
Technology
Combustion
Fuel
Methane
Pollution
N2O
emissions
production
leakage
ratio
control
ratio
emissions
(gCO2/kWh)
ratio
(vs
(vs
(vs
ratio
(vs
combustion)
combustion)
combustion)
combustion)
PC
826
4.2%
3.1%
4.9%
1.7%
IGCC
704
4.2%
3.1%
3.9%
1.0%
CCGT
336
13.1%
12.4%
0.1%
0.8%
Table
13.
Power‐plant
related
emissions
for
fossil‐fuelled
power
plants
Technology
Construction
&
Operation
&
decommissioning
maintenance
(gCO2e/kWh)
(gCO2e/kWh)
PC
4.6
6.9
IGCC
2.4
6.9
CCGT
2.1
6.9
Wind
10.1
0.63
18
Life‐Cycle
Greenhouse
Gas
Emissions
from
Clean
Coal,
Clean
Gas
and
Wind
Generators
Table
14.
CCS‐related
emissions
for
fossil‐fuelled
power
plants
Technology
CCS
CCS
CCS
ΔE
component
sequestration
(vs
non‐CCS
emissions
(vs
plant)
(vs
combustion)
combustion)
PC+CCS
4.4%
90%
31%
IGCC+CCS
3.1%
90%
19%
CCGT+CCS
3.7%
90%
16%
These
parameters
can
be
used
with
equations
(4)
and
(5)
[or
(1)
and
(2)
for
non‐CCS
plans)
to
calculate
the
emissions
for
each
stage
of
the
life
cycle,
for
each
type
of
power
plant.
These
emission
intensities
are
shown
in
Table
15,
along
with
a
rough
estimate
of
the
life‐cycle
emission
intensity
of
existing
U.S.
fossil‐fuelled
power
plants.
These
emissions
are
given
in
units
of
grams
of
CO2‐equivalent
per
kWh
of
electricity
generated.
Table
15.
Life‐cycle
emissions
for
existing
and
new
coal,
gas
and
wind
generators
Methane
leakage
Pollution control
CCS
components
Combustion
less
Fuel production
Construction &
Operation and
Total
life‐cycle
sequestration
(gCO2e/kWh)
(gCO2e/kWh)
(gCO2e/kWh)
(gCO2e/kWh)
(gCO2e/kWh)
(gCO2e/kWh)
(gCO2e/kWh)
(gCO2e/kWh)
(gCO2e/kWh)
maintenance
N2O
exhaust
emissions
decomm.
Existing
807.1
45.8
37.5
33.1
12.5
0.0
3.8
6.9
946.7
U.S.
coal+gasa
New
PC
825.9
34.7
25.6
40.5
14.0
0.0
4.6
6.9
952.2
New
IGCC
704.0
29.6
21.8
27.5
7.0
0.0
2.4
6.9
799.2
New
336.3
44.1
41.7
0.3
2.7
0.0
2.1
6.9
434.1
CCGT
New
108.2
45.4
33.5
53.0
18.4
47.6
6.0
9.0
321.3
PC+CCS
New
83.8
35.2
26.0
32.7
8.4
26.0
2.9
8.2
223.0
IGCC+CCS
New
39.0
51.1
48.4
0.4
3.1
14.4
2.4
8.0
166.9
CCGT+
CCS
Wind
0.0
0.0
0.0
0.0
0.0
0.0
10.1
0.6
10.7
a
Uses
PC
factors
for
all
coal
plants
(69%
of
U.S.
fossil
electricity),
with
an
average
heat
rate
of
10,326
Btu/kWh;
and
CCGT
factors
for
all
gas
plants
(31%
of
U.S.
fossil
elec.),
with
an
average
heat
rate
of
8,126
Btu/kWh.
These
emissions
are
also
plotted
in
Figure
2,
and
Figure
3
shows
more
detail
for
the
wind
and
CCS
generators.
Wind
farms
have
life‐cycle
emissions
about
two
orders
of
magnitude
lower
than
new
fossil
plants
without
CCS,
or
about
one
order
of
magnitude
below
the
cleanest
CCS
plant.
Interestingly,
although
CCS
dramatically
reduces
the
direct
emissions
from
coal
and
gas
plants,
it
increases
the
other
life
cycle
emissions.
These
other
emissions
are
significant
enough
that
even
with
CCS,
new
PC
systems
are
only
slightly
cleaner
than
new
CCGT
systems
without
CCS.
19
Life‐Cycle
Greenhouse
Gas
Emissions
from
Clean
Coal,
Clean
Gas
and
Wind
Generators
In
these
figures
I
have
drawn
a
line
marking
an
emission
level
80
percent
below
the
current
U.S.
fossil
mix.
Climate
experts
are
increasingly
reporting
that
the
world
should
aim
for
emission
levels
around
80
percent
below
current
(or
possibly
1990)
levels.
One
way
to
achieve
this
in
the
electricity
system
would
be
to
replace
current
fossil
plants
with
plants
that
produce
80
percent
lower
emissions
on
a
life‐cycle
basis.
It
is
apparent
from
Figures
2
and
3
that
this
cannot
be
done
with
any
of
the
power
plant
designs
considered
here
other
than
new
CCGT+CCS
or
wind
plants,
or
some
mixture
of
higher‐emitting
plants
with
these
very
low‐emission
plants.
1,000
Operation
and
maintenance
Lifecycle
emissions
(g
CO2e/kWh)
900
Construction
&
decomm.
800
CCS
components
700
600
N2O
exhaust
500
Pollution
control
400
Methane
leakage
300
Fuel
production
200
Combustion
less
sequestration
100
80%
below
existing
mix
0
New
IGCC+CCS
New
IGCC
New
PC
Wind
New
PC+CCS
New
CCGT+CCS
New
CCGT
Existing
U.S.
coal
+gas
Generator
technology
Figure
2.
Life‐cycle
greenhouse
gas
emissions
from
coal,
gas
and
wind
power
plants,
with
and
without
carbon
capture
systems
20
Life‐Cycle
Greenhouse
Gas
Emissions
from
Clean
Coal,
Clean
Gas
and
Wind
Generators
350
Operation
and
maintenance
Lifecycle
emissions
(g
CO2e/kWh)
300
Construction
&
decomm.
250
CCS
components
N2O
exhaust
200
Pollution
control
150
Methane
leakage
100
Fuel
production
50
Combustion
less
sequestration
80%
below
existing
mix
0
New
IGCC+CCS
Wind
New
PC+CCS
New CCGT+CCS
Generator
technology
Figure
3.
Life‐cycle
greenhouse
gas
emissions
from
coal
and
gas
generators
with
and
carbon
capture
systems,
and
from
wind
farms
11. Conclusions
For
this
study
I
used
a
simple
but
comprehensive
model
to
estimate
the
greenhouse
gas
emissions
produced
at
all
stages
of
the
life
cycle
of
power
plants,
including
direct
emissions
due
to
fuel
combustion,
as
well
as
the
emissions
generated
when
producing
fuel,
building
and
maintaining
power
plants,
etc.
Parameters
for
this
model
were
obtained
by
reviewing
a
number
of
previous
life‐cycle
studies
of
power
plants
and
choosing
realistic
emission
values
for
each
stage
of
the
life
cycle.
This work produced several findings:
1. Direct
emissions
due
to
combustion
dominate
the
life‐cycle
emissions
of
fossil
power
plants
without
carbon
capture
and
sequestration
(CCS)
systems.
However,
emissions
from
other
stages
of
the
life
cycle
grow
in
absolute
and
relative
terms
when
direct
emissions
are
reduced
via
CCS.
These
other
emissions
limit
the
ability
of
power
plants
with
CCS
to
achieve
radical
emission
reductions.
For
example,
pulverized
coal
plants
with
CCS
may
reduce
direct
emissions
by
nearly
90
percent;
however,
when
other
stages
of
the
life‐cycle
are
included,
the
full
reduction
is
only
65
percent.
2. Wind
power
plants
have
life‐cycle
emissions
nearly
100
times
lower
than
existing
U.S.
coal
and
gas
plants,
and
over
10
times
lower
than
the
cleanest
foreseeable
fossil
technology,
combined
cycle
natural
gas
turbines
with
CCS.
3. Many
of
the
parameters
in
this
study
are
open
to
uncertainty.
Future
research
could
estimate
these
parameters
more
carefully
and
assess
the
effect
of
their
uncertainty
on
the
life‐cycle
emissions
of
power
plants.
21
Life‐Cycle
Greenhouse
Gas
Emissions
from
Clean
Coal,
Clean
Gas
and
Wind
Generators
4. More
attention
should
be
given
to
reducing
emissions
from
non‐combustion
stages
of
the
life
cycle
of
fossil‐fuelled
electricity,
especially
the
production
of
amines
and
limestone,
methane
leakage
from
coal
mines
and
natural
gas
plants,
and
energy
used
in
the
production
and
transport
of
fuels.
5. It
appears
to
be
impossible
to
achieve
emission
levels
80
percent
below
the
current
U.S.
coal
and
gas
electricity
mix
by
relying
predominantly
on
coal
plants
with
CCS.
If
the
U.S.
seeks
to
achieve
emission
reductions
on
that
scale,
it
will
need
to
take
another
approach.
One
possible
path
would
be
a
nearly
50‐50
mix
between
IGCC
coal
and
CCGT
gas,
if
adequate
natural
gas
supplies
can
be
developed
and
CCS
can
be
rolled
out
universally
and
cost‐effectively.
A
better
possibility
may
be
to
rely
more
heavily
on
renewable
resources,
such
as
wind
power.
22
Life‐Cycle
Greenhouse
Gas
Emissions
from
Clean
Coal,
Clean
Gas
and
Wind
Generators
References
Berry,
J.
E.,
et
al.
(1998).
Power
generation
and
the
environment
–
a
UK
perspective.
Abingdon,
Oxfordshire,
ExternE
Project,
AEA
Technology
Environment.
AEAT3776.
http://www.regie‐energie.qc.ca/audiences/3526‐
04/MemoiresParticip3526/Memoire_CCVK_81_Externe_UnitedKingdom.pdf.
Dones,
R.,
et
al.
(2005).
“Life
Cycle
Inventories
for
the
Nuclear
and
Natural
Gas
Energy
Systems,
and
Examples
of
Uncertainty
Analysis.”
The
International
Journal
of
Life
Cycle
Assessment
10(1):
10‐23.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1065/lca2004.12.181.2.
EIA
(2008).
Annual
Energy
Review
2007.
Washington,
DC,
Energy
Information
Administration,
U.S.
Department
of
Energy.
DOE/EIA‐0384(2007).
http://www.eia.doe.gov/aer/.
EIA
(2009a).
Assumptions
to
the
Annual
Energy
Outlook
2007.
Washington,
DC,
Energy
Information
Administration,
U.S.
Department
of
Energy.
DOE/EIA‐0554(2009).
http://www.eia.doe.gov/oiaf/aeo/assumption/.
EIA
(2009b).
“Form
EIA‐906,
EIA‐920
and
EIA‐923
Databases
(Final
2007
Data).”
Energy
Information
Administration.
Retrieved
April
28,
2009,
from
http://www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/electricity/page/eia906_920.html.
Elsam
(2004).
Life
Cycle
Assessment
of
Offshore
and
Onshore
Sited
Wind
Farms.
Randers,
Denmark,
Elsam
Engineering
A/S
for
Vestas
Wind
Systems
A/S.
Doc.
no.
200128.
http://www.vestas.com/Files/Filer/EN/Sustainability/LCA/LCA_V80_2004_uk.pdf.
EPA
(2009a).
Inventory
of
U.S.
Greenhouse
Gas
Emissions
and
Sinks:
19902007.
Washington,
D.C.,
U.S.
Environmental
Protection
Agency.
http://www.epa.gov/climatechange/emissions/usinventoryreport.html.
EPA
(2009b).
Inventory
of
U.S.
Greenhouse
Gas
Emissions
and
Sinks:
19902007;
Annex
2:
Methodology
and
Data
for
Estimating
CO2
Emissions
from
Fossil
Fuel
Combustion.
Washington,
D.C.,
U.S.
Environmental
Protection
Agency.
http://www.epa.gov/climatechange/emissions/usinventoryreport.html.
EPA
(2009c).
Inventory
of
U.S.
Greenhouse
Gas
Emissions
and
Sinks:
19902007;
Annex
3:
Methodological
Descriptions
for
Additional
Source
or
Sink
Categories.
Washington,
D.C.,
U.S.
Environmental
Protection
Agency.
http://www.epa.gov/climatechange/emissions/usinventoryreport.html.
Frankl,
P.
(2004).
Synthesis
report:
ECLIPSE
Environmental
and
Ecological
Life
Cycle
Inventories
for
present
and
future
Power
Systems
in
Europe,
ECLIPSE
Research
Team,
for
European
Commission
and
Swiss
Federal
Office
for
Education
and
Science.
http://www.eclipse‐
eu.org/pubres_guide.html.
Gorokhov,
V.,
et
al.
(2002).
“Life
cycle
analysis
of
advanced
power
generation
systems.”
Technology
8:
217‐228.
Harrison,
M.
R.,
et
al.
(1997).
Methane
Emissions
from
the
Natural
Gas
Industry
–
Project
Summary.
Research
Triangle
Park,
NC,
National
Risk
Management
Research
Laboratory,
United
States
Environmental
Protection
Agency.
600/SR‐
96/080.
http://www.p2pays.org/ref/07/06348.pdf.
Hondo,
H.
(2005).
“Life
cycle
GHG
emission
analysis
of
power
generation
systems:
Japanese
case.”
Energy
30(11‐12):
2042‐2056.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.energy.2004.07.020.
IPCC
(2005).
IPCC
Special
Report
on
Carbon
Dioxide
Capture
and
Storage.
Cambridge,
UK
and
New
York,
NY,
Cambridge
University
Press.
IPCC
(2007).
Climate
Change
2007:
The
Physical
Science
Basis.
Contribution
of
Working
Group
I
to
the
Fourth
Assessment
Report
of
the
Intergovernmental
Panel
on
Climate
Change.
Cambridge,
United
Kingdom,
Cambridge
University
Press.
Kirchgessner,
D.
A.,
et
al.
(1997).
“Estimate
of
methane
emissions
from
the
U.S.
natural
gas
industry.”
Chemosphere
35(6):
1365‐1390.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0045‐
6535(97)00236‐1.
23
Life‐Cycle
Greenhouse
Gas
Emissions
from
Clean
Coal,
Clean
Gas
and
Wind
Generators
Koornneef,
J.,
et
al.
(2008).
“Life
cycle
assessment
of
a
pulverized
coal
power
plant
with
post‐
combustion
capture,
transport
and
storage
of
CO2.”
International
Journal
of
Greenhouse
Gas
Control
2(4):
448‐467.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijggc.2008.06.008.
Kreith,
F.,
et
al.
(1990).
“A
comparison
of
CO2
emissions
from
fossil
and
solar
power
plants
in
the
United
States.”
Energy
15(12):
1181‐1198.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0360‐
5442(90)90110‐N.
Lelieveld,
J.,
et
al.
(2005).
“Greenhouse
gases:
Low
methane
leakage
from
gas
pipelines.”
Nature
434(7035):
841‐842.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/434841a
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v434/n7035/suppinfo/434841a_S1.html.
Lenzen,
M.
and
U.
Wachsmann
(2004).
“Wind
turbines
in
Brazil
and
Germany:
an
example
of
geographical
variability
in
life‐cycle
assessment.”
Applied
Energy
77(2):
119‐130.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0306‐2619(03)00105‐3.
Longwell,
J.
P.
and
E.
S.
Rubin,
Eds.
(1995).
Coal:
Energy
for
the
Future.
Washington,
DC,
U.S.
National
Research
Council,
Committee
on
the
Strategic
Assessment
of
the
U.S.
Department
of
Energy's
Coal
Program;
National
Academy
Press.
Mayer‐Spohn,
O.
and
M.
Blesl
(2007).
D.02.1
Emission
database
(LCI
data)
for
20052010,
2020
and
2030,
updated
to
May
2008
for
PV,
Wind,
Nuclear
and
Hydro,
with
data
description.
Stuttgart,
IER,
Universität
Stuttgart,
for
CASES:
Cost
Assessment
for
Sustainable
Energy
Systems,
European
Commission
Sixth
Framework
Programme.
http://www.feem‐
project.net/cases/downloads_deliverables.php.
Nomura,
N.,
et
al.
(2001).
“Life‐cycle
emission
of
oxidic
gases
from
power‐generation
systems.”
Applied
Energy
68(2):
215‐227.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0306‐2619(00)00046‐5.
Norton,
B.
(1999).
“Renewable
electricity‐what
is
the
true
cost?”
Power
Engineering
Journal
[see
also
Power
Engineer]
13(1):
6‐12.
http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpls/abs_all.jsp?isnumber=16568&arnumber=765697.
Odeh,
N.
A.
and
T.
T.
Cockerill
(2008a).
“Life
cycle
analysis
of
UK
coal
fired
power
plants.”
Energy
Conversion
and
Management
49(2):
212‐220.
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6V2P‐4PB7575‐
2/2/f09a33bc993d0cf1ee8d1e4ad933a474.
Odeh,
N.
A.
and
T.
T.
Cockerill
(2008b).
“Life
cycle
GHG
assessment
of
fossil
fuel
power
plants
with
carbon
capture
and
storage.”
Energy
Policy
36(1):
367‐380.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.enpol.2007.09.026.
Pacca,
S.
and
A.
Horvath
(2002).
“Greenhouse
Gas
Emissions
from
Building
and
Operating
Electric
Power
Plants
in
the
Upper
Colorado
River
Basin.”
Environmental
Science
&
Technology
36(14):
3194‐3200.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/es0155884.
Proops,
J.
L.
R.,
et
al.
(1996).
“The
lifetime
pollution
implications
of
various
types
of
electricity
generation.
An
input‐output
analysis.”
Energy
Policy
24(3):
229‐237.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0301‐4215(95)00154‐9.
Ruether,
J.
A.,
et
al.
(2004).
“Greenhouse
Gas
Emissions
from
Coal
Gasification
Power
Generation
Systems.”
Journal
of
Infrastructure
Systems
10(3):
111‐119.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1061/(ASCE)1076‐0342(2004)10:3(111).
Schleisner,
L.
(2000).
“Life
cycle
assessment
of
a
wind
farm
and
related
externalities.”
Renewable
Energy
20(3):
279‐288.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0960‐1481(99)00123‐8.
Spath,
P.
L.
and
M.
K.
Mann
(2000).
Life
Cycle
Assessment
of
a
Natural
Gas
CombinedCycle
Power
Generation
System.
Golden,
Colorado,
National
Renewable
Energy
Laboratory.
NREL/TP‐
570‐27715.
http://www.nrel.gov/docs/fy00osti/27715.pdf.
Spath,
P.
L.
and
M.
K.
Mann
(2004).
Biomass
Power
and
Conventional
Fossil
Systems
with
and
without
CO2
Sequestration
–
Comparing
the
Energy
Balance,
Greenhouse
Gas
Emissions
and
Economics.
Golden,
Colorado,
National
Renewable
Energy
Laboratory.
NREL/TP‐
510‐32575.
http://www.nrel.gov/docs/fy04osti/32575.pdf.
Spath,
P.
L.,
et
al.
(1999).
Life
Cycle
Assessment
of
Coalfired
Power
Production
Golden,
CO,
National
Renewable
Energy
Laboratory.
http://www.nrel.gov/docs/fy99osti/25119.pdf.
24
Life‐Cycle
Greenhouse
Gas
Emissions
from
Clean
Coal,
Clean
Gas
and
Wind
Generators
Tahara,
K.,
et
al.
(1997).
“Evaluation
of
CO2
payback
time
of
power
plants
by
LCA.”
Energy
Conversion
and
Management
38(Supplement
1):
S615‐S620.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0196‐8904(97)00005‐8.
Varun,
et
al.
“LCA
of
renewable
energy
for
electricity
generation
systems‐‐A
review.”
Renewable
and
Sustainable
Energy
Reviews
In
Press,
Corrected
Proof.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.rser.2008.08.004.
Vestas
(2006a).
Life
cycle
assessment
of
electricity
delivered
from
an
onshore
power
plant
based
on
Vestas
V821.65
MW
turbines.
Randers,
Denmark,
Vestas
Wind
Systems
A/S.
http://www.vestas.com/Files/Filer/EN/Sustainability/LCA/LCAV82165MWonshore.pd
f.
Vestas
(2006b).
Life
cycle
assessment
of
offshore
and
onshore
sited
wind
power
plants
based
on
Vestas
V903.0
MW
turbines.
Randers,
Denmark,
Vestas
Wind
Systems
A/S.
http://www.vestas.com/Files/Filer/EN/Sustainability/LCA/LCAV90_juni_2006.pdf.
Viebahn,
P.,
et
al.
(2007).
“Comparison
of
carbon
capture
and
storage
with
renewable
energy
technologies
regarding
structural,
economic,
and
ecological
aspects
in
Germany.”
International
Journal
of
Greenhouse
Gas
Control
1(1):
121‐133.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S1750‐5836(07)00024‐2.
25