Poster's note : open access. relevant to BECCS.

http://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1748-9326/11/2/024011

Water and climate risks to power generation with carbon capture and storage

E A Byers, J W Hall, J M Amezaga, G M O'Donnell and A Leathard

Published 12 February 2016 • © 2016 IOP Publishing Ltd
Environmental Research Letters, Volume 11,Number 2

Abstract

Carbon capture and storage (CCS) provides the opportunity to minimize
atmospheric carbon emissions from fossil fuel power plants. However, CCS
increases cooling water use and few studies have simulated the potential
impacts of low flows on CCS power plant reliability. We present a framework
to simulate the impacts of natural hydrological variability and climatic
changes on water availability for portfolios of CCS capacity and cooling
technologies. The methods are applied to the River Trent, the UK's largest
inland cooling water source for electricity generation capacity. Under a
medium emissions climate change scenario, the projected median reductions
in river flow by the 2040s was 43% for Q 99.9 very low flows and 31% in
licensable abstractions between Q 99.9 and Q 91. With CCS developments,
cooling water abstractions are projected to increase, likely exceeding
available water for all users by the 2030s–2040s. Deficits are reduced when
wet/dry hybrid tower cooling is used, which may increase reliability at low
flows. We also explore alternative water licensing regimes, currently
considered by the UK Government. Climate change and growing cooling
demands, individually and jointly present risks that will be prominent by
the 2030s, if unaddressed. These risks may be managed if water-efficient
abstraction is prioritized when supplies are limited

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