Can a Radical New Gas Turbine Be a Zero Carbon Solution?

Well, only if they can solve the problem of methane loss at every stage of the production process. But those problems are solvable, essentially with monitoring, commitment, and some chewing gum and duct tape.

Next problem is, you’ve got a whole lot of carbon, what to do with it?

I think wind and solar are moving too fast for new fossil tech to catch up, but I’ve been wrong before.

Quartz:

The US energy startup, Net Power, has announced that it has successfully fired up its natural-gas plant in La Porte, Texas. In the age of climate change, when reducing emissions should be our primary goal, it may sound odd to celebrate the launch of a fossil fuel-burning plant. But Net Power is unique. Its new facility is the first fossil-fuel power plant that promises to capture all its emissions effectively at zero extra cost, and on May 30 it passed a major milestone in the step towards commercializing a climate-friendly technology.

The underpinning technology, called carbon capture and storage (CCS), has existed since the 1970s. But it is only recently that climate change-mitigation models have begun integrating large-scale CCS into their plans. Even though renewable energy, such as wind and solar, are getting cheaper by the day, the world still gets 80% of its energy from fossil fuels today. And because we have been postponing the date when the world as a whole will start to cut emissions—2017 set a new recordfor global emissions—we don’t have the luxury of waiting for the energy transition to happen on its own pace if we want to avoid missing the Paris climate goals. CCS is a bridging technology to help us avoid catastrophic climate change.

Net Power’s $150-million pilot plant near Houston makes use of the Allam Cycle, named after its inventor Rodney Allam. As Quartz previously reported, here’s how it works:

In a small turbine, a combustor burns natural gas and pure oxygen—producing only carbon dioxide and water—in a chamber that’s already full of supercritical carbon dioxide at high pressure and temperature. That’s no small feat; it’s like trying to light a match while someone else is doing their best to put it out with an extinguisher. The combustion produces additional carbon dioxide, some water, and lots of heat. This hot, high-pressured mixture is then passed through a gas turbine, where the pressure turns a shaft to generate electricity.

The slightly cooled mixture exits the turbine, then is separated into parts. The necessary amount of carbon dioxide is compressed to become supercritical again and added back to the initial chamber, keeping a steady amount of the gas circulating through the system. The remaining, pure stream of CO2 can be buried underground. And the (clean) water is dumped. The heat transfer in this process is so efficient that for each unit of energy trapped in natural gas, the Allam cycle produces 0.8 units of electricity (compared to 0.6 units produced in the most advanced natural-gas power plants).

You can read more in our feature reported in September, when Net Power was in the final stretch of construction and testing. That has now concluded, albeit a few months late, and the full cycle can now be run, according to Walker Dimmig, a principal at 8Rivers, the technology firm that co-owns Net Power with energy firm Exelon Generation and engineering firm McDermott International. The plant is not yet producing power; Dimmig says that should happen later this year.

CNBC:

Natural gas is displacing coal, which could help fight climate change because burning it produces fewer carbon emissions. But producing and transporting natural gas releases methane, a greenhouse gas that also contributes to climate change. How big is the methane problem? Continue reading “Can a Radical New Gas Turbine Be a Zero Carbon Solution?”

Music Break: Frank Turner – Make America Great Again (by making Racists Ashamed again..)

A Brit with an abiding love for America might have written an anthem for the #Resistance.

There’s 1:13 worth of intro, but worth it.

“Make America Great Again”
Well I know I’m just an ignorant Englishman
But I’d like to make America great again
So if you’d forget my accent and the cheek of it
Here’s some suggestions from the special relationship

Let’s make America great again
By making racists ashamed again
Let’s make compassion in fashion again
Let’s make America great again

Well I’ve been fortunate to go round the continent
From California through the Midwest and Providence
And I mostly only encounter common sense
Hospitality and warmth from Americans
But I wish it was a bit less significant
The program and the name of the president
Because it seems to me the truth is self evident
You fought our king to be independent

Make America great again
By making racists ashamed again
Let’s make compassion in fashion again
Let’s make America great again

Ellis Island take me in
Everyone can start again
In the shining city on the hill
Where nobody can be illegal

Let’s make America great again
By making racists ashamed again
Let’s make compassion in fashion again
Let’s make America great again
Let’s be a friend to our oldest friends
And call them out when they’re faltering
Remind them of their best selves and then
We’ll make America great again

Bonus song below..
Continue reading “Music Break: Frank Turner – Make America Great Again (by making Racists Ashamed again..)”

The Truth About “Civility”. Why I Confronted Scott Pruitt.

Instructing the ignorant is not uncivil.

I was taught in parochial school that it is a fundamental act of mercy.

Kristin Mink in Vox:

When I saw Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Scott Pruitt in a tea house last week, I walked up to him and told him to resign. Three days later, he was gone. I obviously can’t claim credit for his departure, which was long in the making. But I would like to think I provided a helpful nudge.

I’m a middle-school teacher and the mother of a 2-year-old. I was at lunch with my family last Monday in the Penn Quarter neighborhood in Washington, DC, when Pruitt sat down only a few tables away. When my husband pointed him out, I knew I had to say something.

I scribbled a couple notes on the back of my receipt, gathered my nerves, and walked up to the man who spent his work days rolling back decades of policies protecting humanity, on behalf of wealthy industry friends who make more money when they’re allowed to produce more pollution. I introduced my child, whose future Pruitt is endangering, rattled off just a few of his damaging policy decisions, and told him to resign before his scandals pushed him out.

That afternoon, new revelations of Pruitt’s rampant corruption became public, and a video of me — a mom with toddler in tow — speaking some truth to his power went viral. I got to spend three straight days blasting his retrograde policies in the news media. On the third day, Pruitt resigned.

I only added a little extra gasoline to the dumpster fire of his scandal-ridden tenure, but I was proud to join the long-standing efforts of environmentalists, activists, investigative journalists, and whistleblowers across the country cranking the heat up to levels even this administration couldn’t endure.

The civility debate is a distraction technique

Some say it wasn’t “civil” of me to approach Pruitt at lunch and that it’s a sign of dark times ahead for our political climate. But these arguments are not genuine: The bogus “civility” argument has arisen because conservatives are losing on the content of the arguments.

Continue reading “The Truth About “Civility”. Why I Confronted Scott Pruitt.”

New Justice Nominee will Aim to Kill Climate Protection, People, and Planet

corndrought

Good Catholic though, so I’ve heard.

Bloomberg News:

Judge Brett Kavanaugh is President Donald Trump’s nominee for the U.S. Supreme Court to replace retiring Justice Anthony Kennedy.

During his time on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, the former clerk for Kennedy and staff secretary for President George W. Bush earned a reputation for thwarting the Obama administration on climate change. Trump announced his intent to nominate Kavanaugh July 9 at the White House.

Kavanaugh wrote the opinion in a 2017 case ruling that the Environmental Protection Agency has no authority to require companies to replace refrigerant chemicals that are also greenhouse gases with more sustainable alternatives.

He also wrote the opinion that struck down portions of the agency’s Cross-State Air Pollution Rule in EME Homer City Generation, LP v. EPA.

Environmental groups were quick to criticize the pick: The League of Conservation Voters, in response to media reports in advance of Trump’s official announcement, tweeted the organization will “fight this every step of the way.”

Even his dissents in clean air cases have impact. The Supreme Court has relied on them multiple times in ruling against the EPA.

In a partial dissent, Kavanaugh said the agency should have considered the cost to the power industry before regulating toxic air pollution in the 2014 case White Stallion Energy Ctr. LLC v. EPA. The Supreme Court cited that dissent in Michigan v. EPA, when it reversed the D.C. Circuit’s decision upholding the standards.

“In administrative law cases, he generally takes a very strict reading” of the Administrative Procedure Act, said Kathryn Kovacs, a law professor at Rutgers University in Camden, N.J. “He could have a big influence in administrative law.” Continue reading “New Justice Nominee will Aim to Kill Climate Protection, People, and Planet”

Climate Change Reveals Cracks in Aging Grid

Above, Retired General Richard Zilmer recently spoke nearby about the critical need for grid infrastructure improvements in the United States, calling the current grid “fragile, antiquated, and subject to single points of failure”.
And it was not designed with modern, distributed renewable energy in mind.

We hear briefly from a German official who describes the rock-steady-although- renewable-charged German grid.

In the age of terrorism, asymmetrical warfare, and changing climate, it’s never been more true.

Latest case in point, below.

CNN:

Thousands of Los Angeles residents were left without power Saturday morning after a heat wave prompted high electricity demand throughout the city.

“Friday’s record-setting heat led to unprecedented peak electricity demand,” according to the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power (LADWP). High demand caused power outages throughout city and left 34,500 customers in the dark — without fans or air conditioning.

The department said that figure accounts for about 2.5% of their 1.5 million customers.

Scorching heat has descended upon California and parts of the southwest after a heat wave swept across Canada earlier in the week, killing dozens in the province of Quebec, according to Canadian health officials.

There are solutions. They involve batteries. Lots of them. And renewable, low carbon energy.

Electrek:

Vermont is starting to get a significant number of Tesla Powerwalls installed through the company’s partnership with Green Mountain Power (GMP), an important electric utility in Vermont.

This latest heat wave in the northeast has hit Vermont pretty hard and GMP says that the energy storage capacity of its network of Powerwalls is making the difference during the peak demand.

Josh Castonguay, Vice President and Chief Innovation Officer at GMP, commented (via Vermont Biz):

“We know our customers are environmentally conscious and make smart choices about their energy use every day. In this heat wave, our customers’ safety and comfort is key. We are so glad to be able to leverage innovation like battery storage to bring down costs for customers and keep them comfortable and safe. Our growing network of stored energy is allowing us to use technology, in partnership with our customers, to deliver innovative solutions today.

Continue reading “Climate Change Reveals Cracks in Aging Grid”

As Super Typhoon Maria Bears Down on China, a Chinese Researcher’s Cyclone Insights

Climate deniers have a myopic view of global cyclone activity, and often will refer to the count of hurricanes impacting the US coast as some kind of global indicator.

Above, Chinese Researcher Lijing Cheng and NCAR’s Kevin Trenberth remind us that by far the larger number of global Tropical Cyclones (variously called Hurricanes in the Atlantic, Typhoons in the Pacific) occur in the western tropical Pacific.
2017 was a big year for Atlantic storms – but actually 2015 set a record for largest number of Major, meaning Cat 3 or higher, storms globally – most of which occurred in the Pacific, pumped by that year’s massive El Nino heat.

tropcyctracks

Washington Post:

On Thursday night, about 300 miles to the northwest of Guam in the western Pacific Ocean, a monster was born. Super Typhoon Maria underwent rapid intensification over the past 24 hours, developing into the equivalent of a strong Category 4 hurricane with maximum sustained winds of 155 mph.

The powerhouse storm may threaten China’s east coast early next week.

..once the storm moved back over the ocean on Wednesday evening, Maria quickly deepened into an intense typhoon, feeding off the exceptionally warm (86 degrees) ocean waters of the western Pacific. In just a 24-hour period ending on Thursday at 8 p.m. local time, Maria went from a 70 mph tropical storm to a 160-mph super typhoon, the equivalent of a Category 5 hurricane.

Continue reading “As Super Typhoon Maria Bears Down on China, a Chinese Researcher’s Cyclone Insights”

Update: Midwest Utility Says Goodbye to Coal, No more Gas, We’re Going Solar

I posted a video interview last week with a Resource Planner for Michigan’s largest electric utility – Consumers Energy – in which she described the decision to forego new gas turbines, in favor of solar, some wind, and efficiency.

Above, a recent local television spot describes further the steps to shut down coal plants.  The goal is 80 percent carbon reduction by mid-century – which is not enough, to be sure – but it’s hard to overestimate the significance of this change, which has really happened at light speed (in utility terms) over the last several years.

Here’s the Resource Planner, Jessica Woycehoski.

It’s part of a larger, international trend.

Utility Dive:

Despite pronouncements from the White House, that preferred mix is no longer a portfolio based largely on coal and nuclear energy. Both those resources have seen their market share undercut by cheaper natural gas in recent years, pushing many of the oldest and least efficient plants offline.

Natural gas may fall victim to a similar situation within the typical two-decade utility planning horizon, according to new research.

Continue reading “Update: Midwest Utility Says Goodbye to Coal, No more Gas, We’re Going Solar”