http://www.technologyreview.com/news/544736/the-dubious-promise-of-bioenergy-plus-carbon-capture/

The Dubious Promise of Bioenergy Plus Carbon Capture

Climate change agreements rest on negative emissions technologies that may
be unachievable.

By Richard Martin on January 8, 2016

WHY IT MATTERS

Eliminating carbon dioxide that’s already been emitted is essential to
achieve the goals of the Paris climate agreement.

While many scientists and climate change activists hailed December’s Paris
agreement as a historic step forward for international efforts to limit
global warming, the landmark accord rests on a highly dubious assumption:
to achieve the goal of limiting the rise in global average temperature to
less than 2 °C (much less the more ambitious goal of 1.5 °C), we don’t just
need to reduce emissions of carbon dioxide to essentially zero by the end
of this century. We also must remove from the atmosphere huge amounts of
carbon dioxide that have already been emitted (see “Paris Climate Agreement
Rests on Shaky Technological Foundations”).

Doing so will involve “negative emissions technologies”—systems that
capture carbon dioxide and store it, usually deep underground. Such
technologies are theoretical at best, but they are considered critical for
achieving the Paris goals. Of the116 scenarios reviewed by the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change to achieve stabilization of
carbon in the atmosphere at between 430 and 480 parts per million (the
level considered necessary for a maximum 2 °C rise in temperature), 101
involve some form of negative emissions.

There are basically two ways to eliminate carbon from the atmosphere. One
is to capture it from the air. Technologies to do so are still in their
infancy and, even if they do prove practical, are likely decades away from
deployment—far too late to achieve the goals of the Paris agreement
(see “Materials Could Capture CO2 and Make It Useful”). The other is to
rely on plants to capture the carbon dioxide, then burn the plants to
generate power (or refine them into liquid fuels such as ethanol), and
capture the resulting carbon emissions. Known as “bioenergy plus carbon
capture and storage,” or BECCS, this cumbersome process is receiving
renewed attention in the wake of Paris. But there is no guarantee that it
will ever work.

Large amounts of biomass would be produced from fast-growing trees,
switchgrass, agriculture waste, or other sources. The biomass would then be
turned into pellets for burning in power plants—either on their own or as
additives. The resulting emissions would be separated using carbon-capture
technologies that have been proven at small scale but have never been
applied economically at anything like commercial scale. Finally, the carbon
dioxide would be stored in deep-underground aquifers, presumably
permanently.

While each of these steps is technically feasible, neither has proven to be
successful at a large scale. Although there are dozens of projects that use
biomass, either alone or in combination with other fuels such as coal, for
producing electricity, there are serious doubts about the economic
viability of the sector, the availability of biomass supplies to support
growth, and the life-cycle contribution of such facilities to greenhouse
gas emissions. Ambitious projections for carbon capture and storage
programs, meanwhile, have proven unrealistic, and there is little
indication that such systems will become economically viable in the
foreseeable future.

What’s more, although the full BECCS process is often touted as
carbon-negative, there are several faulty assumptions in that
characterization.

The first is that sufficient amounts of biomass could be produced to
displace a significant percentage of fossil-fuel produced electricity, and
that producing those amounts would be carbon-neutral. Advocates assert that
because plants capture carbon from the atmosphere, burning the plants and
releasing the carbon back into the atmosphere does not result in a net
gain. That is nominally true, but it doesn’t account for the energy
required for growing, harvesting, processing, and transporting the biomass,
and it diverts land from other purposes, including food crops, that will
become more urgent as the human population surges toward nine billion.

The most prominent BECCS project currently underway is Archer Daniels
Midland’s project at Decatur, Illinois. The project has been years in
development. “Permitting has been a long and complex process,” says Scott
McDonald, the project manager. And it still awaits final approval from the
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Once it’s complete, the captured
carbon will not be stored underground but used for enhanced oil recovery in
nearby wells. Studies have estimated that about a billion barrels of
residual oil could be recovered in the Illinois basin using carbon dioxide
for enhanced oil recovery. In other words, a technology advertised as
carbon-negative would result in the production of a billion new barrels of
carbon-producing fossil fuels—oil that would not otherwise be produced.
That is hardly a climate-friendly solution.

Already, some proposed BECCS projects have foundered on these obstacles. In
September, Drax, one of the largest power companies in the U.K., pulled out
of the White Rose Carbon Capture Project, which would capture 90 percent of
the carbon emissions from a 428-megawatt plant that burns coal and biomass.
Drax has converted three of the six coal-fired turbines at the site to burn
biomass. The fate of the carbon-capture project in the wake of Drax’s
departure is uncertain. The experience of “clean coal” projects using
carbon capture and storage, without biomass, is similarly discouraging:
FutureGen, a highly touted CCS project in Illinois, was finally canceled in
February 2015 after multiple setbacks.

In short, BECCS represents the marriage of two technologies, neither of
which has proven to be viable on its own. The technology’s “credibility as
a climate change mitigation option is unproven,” concluded a September 2014
study in Nature Climate Change led by Sabine Fuss, a scientist at the
Mercator Research Institute on Global Commons and Climate Change in Berlin,
“and its widespread deployment in climate stabilization scenarios might
become a dangerous distraction.”

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