BP Kills Australian Clean Coal Plans

Clean coal isn’t having much luck.

The latest project casualty is a carbon capture and storage plant planned for Kwinana, Australia – south of Perth.

BP pulled the plug on the $2 billion venture on account of an unforeseen geological defect in the area: The leaky rock formations can’t seem to seal in CO2 for the long-term.

Tough luck. Australia gets 80% of its electricity from coal. And the project was supposed to demonstrate to the world that a near-zero emissions coal plant can be done.

But two years -- and hundreds of millions of dollars -- later, it’s still nothing more than another clean coal plant that never was -- though Australia, on a wing and a prayer, has committed even more funding to the technology.

If that story sounds familiar, it should.

Last year, BP dumped plans to build a CCS plant in the UK, as did Shell in Norway.

In the US, Florida-based TECO Energy shelved its long-awaited CCS project in October. And then there’s FutureGen.

It was to be the world's biggest and America’s #1 contribution to clean coal until the Department of Energy canceled all of its funding in January.

Last week the DOE unveiled a new program that would take FutureGen's $1.3 billion and direct it to a slew of smaller demo plants.

It could be another long and expensive road to nowhere.

In the meantime, there are no commercial-scale power plants that can both capture CO2 and store it in the ground, anywhere -- not even close -- despite coal industry shills and governments pinning their hopes on it.

Here's the obvious reality check from Howard Herzog of MIT's Laboratory for Energy and the Environment, in this Scientific American article:

How can we expect to build hundreds of these plants when we're having so much trouble building the first one?

Point taken. We can't.

And here's another point worth remembering: the cleanest coal is still no coal at all.

 

Source: The Australian

 

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