http://phys.org/news/2014-05-sweden-vattenfall-abandons-co2-storage.html

[Funny how once the taxpayer money disappears, none of the fossil-fuel
combustion to carbon capture and storage projects make economic sense.
Another one bites the dust.  Fortunately for oil, natural gas and coal
producers, the U.S. and Canadian governments still have tons of taxpayer money to spend on CCS research. Notice the North American fossil fuel energy producers are not investing their own money in this research.

Wind power is now cost-competitive with coal and - in some places -
natural gas for electricity generation.  That's before we saddle the
fossil fuels with CCS costs.]

Sweden's Vattenfall abandons research on CO2 storage

Swedish energy giant Vattenfall said Tuesday that it had given up its
research on CO2 capture and storage, intended to make the company's coal power plants greener.

"Vattenfall will discontinue its R&D (research and development)
activities regarding coal power with CCS (carbon capture and storage),"
the group said in a statement explaining its new research plans.

The state-owned giant had been investing in this technology for more
than 10 years, with plans for a power plant equipped with CCS in 2016.

Capturing and liquifying CO2 coming from carbon combustion to later
store it underground was meant to curb greenhouse effect gas emissions,
but its costs and the energy it requires make the technology unviable.

These difficulties had already forced Vattenfall to give up in 2011 a
large project at a pilot plant in Jaenschwalde, in eastern Germany.

The European Union then demanded the reimbursement of funding worth 45
million euros ($62.75 million), but neither Vattenfall nor the EU ever
said whether the group complied with the request.

In late 2011, the Swedish company said it still believed in the project
and stated that it expected to build a coal power plant equipped with
CCS by 2025.

But Tuesday, the group said that CCS was not among its priorities anymore.

"We are evaluating our research portfolio in order to invest in R&D
projects which can contribute more quickly to our business development,"
Research and Development Nordic head Karl Bergman said.

With a capacity of 11,300 megawatt in 14 plants in Germany, Denmark, the Netherlands, Vattenfall is one of the biggest European coal and
lignite—a combustible rock considered the lowest rank of
coal—electricity producers, which accounted for 40 percent of its total
production in 2013.




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