Stanford Study Casts Doubt on Carbon Capture
Current approaches to carbon capture can increase air pollution and are not efficient at reducing carbon in the atmosphere, according to research from Mark Z. Jacobson.
By Taylor Kubota
October 25, 2019 -- One
proposed method for reducing carbon dioxide (CO2) levels in the
atmosphere – and reducing the risk of climate change – is to capture carbon
from the air or prevent it from getting there in the first place. However,
research from Mark Z.
Jacobson at Stanford University, published
in Energy and Environmental Science, suggests that carbon capture
technologies can cause more harm than good.
“All sorts of scenarios have been
developed under the assumption that carbon capture actually reduces substantial
amounts of carbon. However, this research finds that it reduces only a small
fraction of carbon emissions, and it usually increases air pollution,” said
Jacobson, who is a professor of civil and environmental engineering. “Even if
you have 100 percent capture from the capture equipment, it is still worse,
from a social cost perspective, than replacing a coal or gas plant with a wind
farm because carbon capture never reduces air pollution and always has a
capture equipment cost. Wind replacing fossil fuels always reduces air
pollution and never has a capture equipment cost.”
Jacobson, who is also a senior fellow at
the Stanford Woods
Institute for the Environment, examined public data from a coal with
carbon capture electric power plant and a plant that removes carbon from the
air directly. In both cases, electricity to run the carbon capture came from
natural gas.
He calculated the net CO2 reduction and total cost of
the carbon capture process in each case, accounting for the electricity needed
to run the carbon capture equipment, the combustion and upstream emissions
resulting from that electricity, and, in the case of the coal plant, its
upstream
emissions. (Upstream emissions are emissions, including from leaks and
combustion, from mining and transporting a fuel such as coal or natural gas.)
Common estimates of carbon capture
technologies – which only look at the carbon captured from energy production at
a fossil fuel plant itself and not upstream emissions – say carbon capture can
remediate 85-90 percent of carbon emissions. Once Jacobson calculated all the emissions
associated with these plants that could contribute to global warming, he
converted them to the equivalent amount of carbon dioxide in order to compare
his data with the standard estimate. He found that in both cases the equipment
captured the equivalent of only 10-11 percent of the emissions they produced,
averaged over 20 years.
This research also looked at the social
cost of carbon capture – including air pollution, potential health problems,
economic costs and overall contributions to climate change – and concluded that
those are always similar to or higher than operating a fossil fuel plant
without carbon capture and higher than not capturing carbon from the air at
all. Even when the capture equipment is powered by renewable electricity,
Jacobson concluded that it is always better to use the renewable electricity
instead to replace coal or natural gas electricity or to do nothing, from a
social cost perspective.
Given this analysis, Jacobson argued
that the best solution is to instead focus on renewable options, such as wind
or solar, replacing fossil fuels.
Efficiency and upstream emissions
This research is based on data from two
real carbon capture plants, which both run on natural gas. The first is a coal
plant with carbon capture equipment. The second plant is not attached to any
energy-producing counterpart. Instead, it pulls existing carbon dioxide from
the air using a chemical process.
Jacobson examined several scenarios to
determine the actual and possible efficiencies of these two kinds of plants,
including what would happen if the carbon capture technologies were run with
renewable electricity rather than natural gas, and if the same amount of
renewable electricity required to run the equipment were instead used to
replace coal plant electricity.
While the standard estimate for the
efficiency of carbon capture technologies is 85-90 percent, neither of these
plants met that expectation. Even without accounting for upstream emissions,
the equipment associated with the coal plant was only 55.4 percent efficient
over 6 months, on average. With the upstream emissions included, Jacobson found
that, on average over 20 years, the equipment captured only 10-11 percent of
the total carbon dioxide equivalent emissions that it and the coal plant
contributed. The air capture plant was also only 10-11 percent efficient, on
average over 20 years, once Jacobson took into consideration its upstream
emissions and the uncaptured and upstream emissions that came from operating
the plant on natural gas.
Due to the high energy needs of carbon
capture equipment, Jacobson concluded that the social cost of coal with carbon
capture powered by natural gas was about 24 percent higher, over 20 years, than
the coal without carbon capture. If the natural gas at that same plant were
replaced with wind power, the social cost would still exceed that of doing
nothing. Only when wind replaced coal itself did social costs decrease.
For both types of plants this suggests
that, even if carbon capture equipment is able to capture 100 percent of the
carbon it is designed to offset, the cost of manufacturing and running the
equipment plus the cost of the air pollution it continues to allow or increases
makes it less efficient than using those same resources to create renewable
energy plants replacing coal or gas directly.
“Not only does carbon capture hardly
work at existing plants, but there’s no way it can actually improve to be
better than replacing coal or gas with wind or solar directly,” said Jacobson.
“The latter will always be better, no matter what, in terms of the social cost.
You can’t just ignore health costs or climate costs.”
This study did not consider what happens
to carbon dioxide after it is captured but Jacobson suggests that most
applications today, which are for industrial use, result in additional leakage
of carbon dioxide back into the air.
Focusing on
renewables
People propose that carbon capture could
be useful in the future, even after we have stopped burning fossil fuels, to
lower atmospheric carbon levels. Even assuming these technologies run on
renewables, Jacobson maintains that the smarter investment is in options that
are currently disconnected from the fossil fuel industry, such as reforestation
– a natural version of air capture – and other forms of climate change
solutions focused on eliminating other sources of emissions and pollution.
These include reducing biomass burning, and reducing halogen, nitrous oxide and
methane emissions.
“There is a lot of reliance on carbon
capture in theoretical modeling, and by focusing on that as even a possibility,
that diverts resources away from real solutions,” said Jacobson. “It gives
people hope that you can keep fossil fuel power plants alive. It delays action.
In fact, carbon capture and direct air capture are always opportunity costs.”
https://news.stanford.edu/2019/10/25/study-casts-doubt-carbon-capture/
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