Carbon capture and storage FutureGen
2.0 project moves forward into 2nd phase
Near-zero emissions coal-fueled power plant to
demonstrate commercial-scale carbon capture and storage technologies
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[February 05, 2013]
WASHINGTON
-- Following the
successful completion of the first phase, the U.S. Energy Department
announced on Monday the beginning of Phase II of project development
with a new cooperative agreement between the FutureGen Industrial
Alliance and the Department of Energy for an innovative carbon
capture and storage, or CCS, project in Illinois.
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"The Department of Energy is committed to the demonstration of
carbon capture and storage technologies," said U.S. Energy Secretary Steven Chu.
"We believe FutureGen 2.0 is an important step in making economic,
commercial-scale CCS a reality. The project is important part of a
portfolio of approaches we are pursuing to reduce carbon emissions
from existing coal-fired power plants and perhaps other large,
localized CO2 emitters."
"Today's announcement from the Department of Energy that the FutureGen project is moving forward with Phase II shows a strong
commitment from the Obama administration to create jobs and
demonstrate the future of low-carbon-emission coal power right here
in central Illinois," said U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin. "I thank
Gov. Quinn and all of the Illinois and industry stakeholders for
their continued leadership on this issue. I join them in remaining
committed to making FutureGen a reality, and to putting Illinois and
the United States at the forefront of cutting-edge technology to
improve the environment and create good-paying jobs."
"We have shown time and again that FutureGen is welcome, and the
project will succeed in Illinois," said Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn. "We look forward to working with all of the project partners to see
that FutureGen 2.0 will move forward, and that the reality of this
first-of-its-kind project will be realized in Illinois."
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In cooperation with the FutureGen project partners, the Department
of Energy is investing in the upgrade of a coal-fired power plant in
Meredosia, Ill., with oxy-combustion technology to capture more than
1 million tons of carbon dioxide each year -- more than 90 percent of the plant's
carbon emissions. Other emissions will also be reduced to near-zero
levels. Instead of capturing carbon dioxide in the presence of a large amount
of nitrogen, the oxy-combustion approach extracts the oxygen from
air before combustion, greatly reducing the cost of carbon capture
at the exhaust stack. This project will test oxygen separation
technology and exhaust processing technology after combustion at
power plant scales. Using proven pipeline technology, the carbon
dioxide will
then be safely transported and securely stored underground at a
nearby storage site. This groundbreaking project will help pave the
way for other cleaner and more sustainable advanced coal-burning
power plants.
The completion of the FutureGen 2.0 project's first phase included
important technical and financial milestones such as the identification
of a sequestration site in Morgan County, preliminary
characterization and test drilling, and a commitment from the
Illinois Commerce Committee to cover the FutureGen 2.0 project's
output under its power purchasing plans. The cooperative agreement
announced with the FutureGen Industrial Alliance will build on
these successes to begin preliminary design, pre-construction and
engineering for the retrofitted, near-zero emission coal-fired power
plant.
[Text
from
news release from the U.S. Department of Energy] |