https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg22730334-800-uk-to-build-worlds-first-power-plant-with-negative-emissions/

New Scientist
   5 August 2015

UK to build world's first power plant with negative emissions

Drax’s domes: where biomass is stored (Image: Paul Rogers/The Times)

IT IS the dream scenario for fighting climate change: a power station that
delivers negative emissions. And it could be coming to the UK, helped along
by the growth of forests in the American South and some handy holes beneath
the North Sea.

The giant coal power station at Drax in Yorkshire, with its 12 cooling
towers, is one of the world’s largest greenhouse gas emitters. It sends
some 23 million tonnes of carbon dioxide up its stacks each year, while
supplying up to a tenth of the UK’s power.

Its owners are now planning to replace coal with wood pellets and bury the
emissions. Combined with growing trees to replace all those burned, the
mega-polluter could one day be transformed into the world’s largest
industrial absorber of CO2.

“This is a very exciting new technology,” says Jeremy Tomkinson of the
National Non-Food Crops Centre, a consultancy that promotes bioenergy. “It
means we can actually reduce the volume of CO2 in the atmosphere.”

The biomass side of the transformation is already under way. “Since the
beginning of July, half of Drax’s electricity has been generated by burning
biomass, mostly from pine forests in the American Deep South,” Drax’s
vice-president for sustainability, Richard Peberdy, told me during a tour
of those forests in Mississippi. The fourth of its six generators converts
to biomass next year.

To feed the furnaces, the Drax company recently opened mills in Louisiana
and Mississippi that turn logs cut from local pine forests into dried and
compressed pellets, and a port at Baton Rouge, Louisiana, to ship them. It
also buys hardwood pellets from elsewhere in the South, as well as Canadian
sawdust, and will soon start burning wood from Brazil.

All told, 7 million tonnes of pellets will cross the Atlantic next year.
Only about 5 per cent of Drax’s biomass comes from the UK, mostly straw and
miscanthus.

Click on the interactive map below to explore carbon’s journey from
American trees to Yorkshire power plant to storage under the North Sea
(Storymap by Iona Twadell)

Next up is carbon capture and storage (CCS). Later this year, the UK
government is expected to give the go-ahead for the £500-million White Rose
project at Drax, which from 2020 could capture 2 million tonnes of CO2
annually from a new power plant burning coal and biomass, sending it down a
165-kilometre pipeline for burial under the North Sea.

With CO2 burial up and running, the White Rose project will make
electricity carbon-negative for the equivalent of around 600,000 homes. The
pipeline will be big enough to take most of the rest of the CO2 produced at
Drax if it were captured in future.

The UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change sees such measures as
vital to curbing global warming. Its most recent report, published last
year, concluded that widespread use of biomass with CCS would be needed to
keep warming below 2 °C.

“To arrest climate change we need negative carbon emissions. At the moment
sustainable biomass with CCS is the leading technology to achieve this,”
says Peter Emery, a Drax director and chairman of Capture Power, the
consortium behind White Rose.

UK to build world's first power plant with negative emissions
The most pressing question for now is the cost in CO2 emissions of
producing the biomass. Drax says the energy needed to harvest, process and
transport the wood will produce emissions just 14 per cent of those from
burning coal. It also claims that all the carbon emitted by burning the
wood can be recaptured by planting new trees.

However, Timothy Searchinger, an environmental analyst at Princeton
University, says the time lag while new trees grow and soak up CO2 will
increase the rate of global warming for several decades. And once trees
have been felled, the land could be converted to other uses. A study last
year for the UK’s Department of Energy and Climate Change found that in the
worst case, in which cut forests are replaced by cotton farms, burning
biomass at Drax might end up emitting three times as much CO2 as burning
coal does.

What’s the catch?
But Drax is creating an economic incentive for planting and better forest
management, Peberdy says. By providing a market, its plan could increase
the carbon content of the forests. “We believe forests are growing [in
area] faster than they would be if we weren’t here.”

UK to build world's first power plant with negative emissions
Better than coal? (Image: Jez Coulson – The Sunday Times)

Dale Greene, dean of forestry at the University of Georgia, agrees. He says
markets for timber products are the reason that southern forests have been
growing in extent for decades. Mississippi has added 400,000 hectares, many
on former cotton fields. “The effect of Drax’s arrival has been to help
keep the South forested. If we harvest more, we plant more and there is
more carbon in the forest,” he says.

Even so, trees would have to be planted on a vast amount of land to have
any effect on climate change, says John Lanchbery of the RSPB. “This would
be land which is currently used for something else, like wildlife or
farming,” he adds.

Such land may be less diverse than the original forests. Scot Quaranda of
the Dogwood Alliance, an environmental NGO, says that the more intensive
forestry encouraged by Drax’s presence is replacing naturally regenerated
diverse pine forests with uniform ranks of planted yellow pine.

Thomas Gasser of the Climate and Environmental Sciences Laboratory in
Gif-sur-Yvette, France, backs the development of negative-emissions
technologies, but adds that much more action is needed. “Drax is not a
miraculous solution that spares us from shifting to a less carbon-based
energy mix, and of reducing overall energy demand.”

This article appeared in print under the headline “Negative emissions ahead”

By Fred Pearce

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