http://www.geoengineeringmonitor.org/2016/07/failure-at-kemper/

July 12, 2016
Miserable failure at Kemper “clean coal” plant indicates future failure of
“clean bioenergy” climate solution

Bioenergy with Carbon Capture and Storage (BECCS) was granted a huge boost
of support by the IPCC’s “mitigation” Working Group in their 5th Assessment
Report. Since then growing attention has been given to this technofix as
the main approach to removing CO2 from the overloaded atmosphere. This is
in spite of the fact that there are currently no operating commercial-scale
BECCS projects*, and there is ongoing serious debate over the climate and
other impacts of all large scale bioenergy. There are also serious concerns
about costs, feasibility and safety of underground storage.

Perhaps the best indication we have for the feasibility of large scale
BECCS, which the IPCC is relying on to avoid catastrophic climate change,
is the current generation of coal CCS projects. These have been under
development for many years under the popular guise of “clean coal”.

On 5th July the New York Times provided a disturbing evaluation of the
Kemper “clean coal” plant in Mississippi, USA, a hugely over-hyped and
over-priced energy project that industry and policy-makers claim to be a
solution to climate change, despite mountains of evidence that it is only
making matters worse.

Kemper is one of several such projects. SaskPower’s Boundary Dam facility
in Saskatchewan, Canada, is supposedly the first commercial-scale coal CCS
plant in the world. It sends some CO2 to an oil field, which is then used
to pump out otherwise inaccessible oil reserves, called “enhanced oil
recovery”. They are actually paying fines to the oil company for failing to
deliver the contracted amount of CO2. How this project is billed as a
“solution” to climate change is baffling.

FutureGen in the USA is another project – an integrated gasification
combined cycle (IGCC) coal power station with CCS that collapsed after over
$175 million had been spent. Then came FutureGen 2.0, a scheme to retrofit
an old coal plant like the Boundary Dam with CCS, which suffered the same
fate after over $200 million of public money had been spent.

Then there is the White Rose project in the UK. It would have been the
first new coal plant to be built in the UK since the 70’s, coming right at
the time when coal is supposedly being phased out. Developers went even
further in their rhetoric, saying that this would be the first “negative
emissions” plant in the world, since it would burn some biomass in the mix.
The argument is that all bioenergy is “carbon neutral”, so capturing the
CO2 would render it “carbon negative”. Yet the project was to source coal
from mines in Colombia and Russia that have resulted in violent conflict
with communities, and wood from the Southern US, where the world’s most
biodiverse temperate wetland forests are being felled and turned into wood
pellets. Coal mining and deforestation cannot be “solutions” to climate
change. Thankfully the project collapsed, after millions had been spent on
feasibility studies.

Billions in public funds are being spent on these horrendously misguided
projects, money that could be allocated instead to genuine attempts to
reduce emissions and restore ecosystems. These projects are giant
infrastructure projects that are pitched as progressive and innovative
solutions to climate crisis, but in reality are a part of the problem, and
always result in more damage and emissions once you peel back the greenwash.

Applying CCS to coal plants is simply a desperate attempt to throw a
lifeline to an industry that should have been ended years ago. But the
impacts of coal mining, the fact that mining itself is inherently polluting
and destructive, and invariably results in harm to the communities near to
it or displaced for it, is never a consideration.

The Kemper “clean coal” plant must now take first prize as the biggest
failure of these projects. Regardless of whether it is ever finished and
operates satisfactorily, it has failed before ever being switched on. The
New York Times’ detailed and shocking article lays bare the level of
corporate wheeling and dealing at Kemper. The article is based of the
account of a whistle-blower, who is a former employee at the plant. We
really recommend that this article is read.

The massive failure of “clean coal” projects like Kemper and the others
described above are a clear warning for the future of BECCS. BECCS is
touted as a means of delivering negative emissions based on entirely faulty
carbon accounting that assumes all bioenergy – even cutting down forests to
burn in coal plants – is “carbon neutral”, and that capturing the carbon
will miraculously result in the removal of CO2 from the atmosphere. BECCS
has long been discussed in climate geoengineering debates, where it is
presented as one of the more “benign” or “soft” approaches to tweaking the
climate (at least in comparison to spewing sulphate particles into the
stratosphere, or dumping iron into the ocean).

Now climate scientists within the IPCC Working Group 3, largely dominated
by economists rather than experts on energy technologies or ecology, have
promoted the whole concept of BECCS as “essential” to stabilising our
climate. Promoting technofixes that are currently non-existent, and for
which we have very clear indications they can never work, is nothing short
of grossly irresponsible.



* Except for one plant in Illinois, USA, that captures some CO2 from
ethanol fermentation. This is being called BECCS and “negative emissions”
by industry proponents. However, not even the plant’s operators claim that
it achieves negative emissions, as the emissions associated with ethanol
production outstrip what is being captured.

Tags: BECCS, CCS, clean coal, climate
change, futuregen,geoengineering, kemper, negative emissions, white rose

Categorised in: BECCS, Carbon Capture and Storage,Negative Emissions

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