Can CO2 Be Stored Safely Underground
Bonn, Germany (SPX) Aug 31, 2010 Coal-fired power stations release more carbon dioxide per kWh than any other fossil fuel facility, and Germany has a large number of just this sort of power station. It is estimated that around 40 billion tons of coal are stored in potential open cast deposits in Lusatia and the Lower Rhine Basin. That makes up 14 percent of world reserves. The question is, can the carbon dioxide emissions be captured and stored underground? The idea of filtering carbon dioxide out of coal power station exhaust gases and storing it underground is certainly very attractive. A pilot power station - Schwarze Pumpe in Lusatia - has been burning coal in pure oxygen since 2008; and it is possible to segregate the resulting carbon dioxide emitted by this oxyfuel process. Another power station in nearby Janschwalde will soon be commissioned. Other approaches to filtering emissions are showing promise around the world, and segregating greenhouse gases should not be a major problem in the future. However, such processes consume energy, thus reducing the overall efficiency of the power station.
Test storage facility in Brandenburg The project, called CO2SINK, is designed to test whether the gas will then remain underground reliably for decades or even centuries. The safety of long-term underground storage of carbon dioxide is still an open question. Will such stores release their contents over time? Would this be hazardous for people and animals in the vicinity? This is a vanishingly small risk, but a loss rate of just one percent could sabotage all climate protection plans. This would mean that the majority of the stored gas would gradually be released into the atmosphere. To deal with this, experts have suggested that the escaping gas should be captured and pumped back down again. But this solution requires pumping over a very long time. This would not only be very expensive, but would require long-term management of the stores, which critics of the CCS concept are already comparing to the disadvantages of long-term nuclear waste storage.
Potential carbon dioxide stores in German have only limited capacity This - as yet uncertain - amount would assure at most 30 years of storage for power station emissions of 300 million tons a year. The population in potential storage areas is already starting to resist the idea, due to the unknown risks associated with it. At the current state of CCS technology, it will still be 20 to 25 years before segregation and storage processes are ready for large-scale deployment. It is questionable whether this expensive technology, with its long-term (over centuries) management requirements, would make economic sense in Germany. But energy hungry countries with large coal deposits, such as China, may see CCS as an option for dealing with carbon dioxide emissions.
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