http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1750583616301128

International Journal of Greenhouse Gas Control

June 2016, Vol.49:343–363, doi:10.1016/j.ijggc.2016.03.007

Techno-economic evaluation of co-firing biomass gas with natural gas in
existing NGCC plants with and without CO2 capture

Zakieh Khorshidi, Nick H. Florin, Dianne E. Wiley

Highlights

•The impact of biomass gas quantity and quality on the performance and
economics of co-firing at a NGCC power plant is assessed, including the
impact of capture.

•Three co-firing levels (5%, 20%, 40%) and three biomass gasification
technologies (atmospheric air-blown gasification, pressurized oxygen-blown
gasification and atmospheric indirectly heated gasification) were evaluated.

•The results show that the type of the gasification technology did not have
a major impact on plant efficiency, emission intensity or cost of
electricity of co-firing.

•Different economic conditions were assessed to evaluate the conditions
were required to make co-firing cost competitive. Modest incentives (carbon
price > 27 $/t CO2 and REC > 10 $/MWh or combination of both at lower
levels) were found to be sufficient to encourage co-firing.

Abstract

Natural gas combined cycle (NGCC) power plants have emission intensities a
half to a third that of current coal-fired power plants. To meet more
stringent emission targets, it is essential to reduce the emissions of
these plants to an even lower level. Co-firing gasified biomass with
natural gas (NG) reduces the plant emissions while allowing continued use
of existing assets. If CO2capture and storage are also applied, negative
emissions may result which could provide additional CO2 credits to reduce
the overall cost of decarbonising electricity generation. This paper
investigates the impact of biomass gas quantity and quality on the
performance and economics of a 547 MWeNGCC plant retrofitted with biomass
gas co-firing. The analysis considers co-firing with and without
CO2 capture. Three co-firing levels (5%, 20%, 40%) and three biomass
gasification technologies (atmospheric air-blown gasification, pressurized
oxygen-blown gasification and atmospheric indirectly heated gasification)
are evaluated. Compared to the baseline NGCC power plant, at low co-firing
levels, the type of gasification technology does not significantly affect
the overall thermal efficiency, CO2 emission intensity or cost of
electricity (COE). However, at higher levels of co-firing, the overall
thermal efficiency increases by up to 2.5% LHV for the atmospheric
air-blown gasifier but decreases by about 0.4% LHV for the pressurized
oxygen-blown gasification and 2.5% for atmospheric indirectly heated
gasification technologies. The CO2 emission intensity also changes by up to
0.16–0.18 t/MWh at co-firing levels of 40% for all three gasification
technologies, while the COE increases by 0.12–0.18 $/MWh. The analysis also
shows that the increase in the fuel flow rate is more significant for BGs
with lower heating values. The increase in the fuel flow rate can increase
the topping cycle efficiency but requires more modifications to the gas
turbine. Thus, co-firing BGs with lower heating value might be less suited
to retrofit scenarios. By applying capture to co-firing plants, negative
emissions are achieved at medium and high co-firing levels with 7–18%
increase in the cost of electricity relative to NGCC with capture. An
evaluation of the effect of incentive schemes shows that relatively modest
incentives (carbon price > 27 $/t CO2 and REC > 10 $/MWh or combination of
both at lower levels) are required to make co-firing cost competitive,
while higher incentives are required for co-firing coupled with capture
(carbon price > 46 $/t CO2 and REC > 78 $/MWh or combination of both at
lower levels). As the co-firing level increases, lower incentives are
needed to achieve economic feasibility.

Keywords
Biomass
Gasification
Co-firing
Natural gas combined cycle
CO2 capture
Carbon price
Renewable energy certificates

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