| Literature DB >> 30194324 |
James Gunnar Groesbeck1,2, Joshua M Pearce3,4,5.
Abstract
Avoiding climate destabilization caused by greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, requires climate-neutral electricity sources. It has been proposed that the GHG emissions from coal-fired power plants can be offset by carbon capture and sequestration or bio-sequestration. However, solar photovoltaic (PV) technology has recently declined so far in costs it now offers both technical and economic potential to offset all of coal-fired electricity use. PV only emits GHGs during fabrication and not during use. To determine which technical solution to climate-neutral electricity generation should be preferred, this study aggregates and synthesizes life cycle analysis studies for exergy, GHG emissions and land transformation for climate-neutral electricity. The results show that because of lower exergy efficiencies coal plants emit 13-18 times more GHG and transform 5-13 times more land than PV. Optimal bio-sequestration of coal-fired GHG requires 62% of U.S. arable land or 89% of all U.S land with average forest cover. Carbon capture and storage and enhanced oil recovery can improve coal performance, but for all cases the results clearly show that PV is a far more effective use of land. Overall, for the first time this study found climate-neutral photovoltaic farms are a preferred solution to climate-neutral coal fired electricity generation.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30194324 PMCID: PMC6128891 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-31505-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1LCEA boundary scope for climate-neutral PV and pulverized coal electricity production. The solid arrows represent the flow of the life cycle, the dashed lines represent the CO2eq of the GHG emissions uptake by bio-sequestration and the labels detail various the scenarios for the coal lifecycle.
Overview of exergy flow, emissions and land transformation by life cycle phase in a climate neutral coal plant outputting 376 TWhrs of electricity over a 50 year lifetime.
| Life Cycle Phase | Source/Sink | Exergyin (GWh) | Exergyout (GWh) | Emissions* ( | Land Transformation (ha) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Upstream without CCS | Mining | 6.69 × 104 [ | 2.16 × 107 [ | 1.32 × 104 [ | |
| Transport | 3.17 × 104 [ | 1.76 × 107 [ | 4.32 × 103 [ | ||
| Construction | 1.29 × 104 [ | 1.66 × 105 [ | N/A | ||
| Total | 1.11 × 105 [ | 3.92 × 107 [ | 1.78 × 104 [ | ||
| Upstream with CCS | Mining | 9.21 × 104 [ | 2.94 × 107 [ | 1.82 × 104 [ | |
| Transport | 4.37 × 104 [ | 2.40 × 107 [ | 4.32 × 103 [ | ||
| Construction | 1.29 × 104 [ | 1.66 × 107 [ | N/A | ||
| Total | 1.49 × 105 [ | 5.34 × 107 [ | 2.27 × 104 [ | ||
| Operation without CCS | Plant | 9.95 × 105 [ | 3.76 × 105 | 3.38 × 108 [ | 2.02 × 102 [ |
| Operation with CCS | Plant | 1.37 × 106 [ | 3.76 × 105 | 6.07 × 107 [ | 2.02 × 102 [ |
| Downstream without CCS | Bio-sequestration | 2.57 × 108 [ | −3.77 × 108 [ | 3.43 × 105 [ | |
| Downstream with CCS into a saline aquifer | Bio-sequestration | 8.14 × 107 [ | −1.18 × 108 [ | 1.09 × 105 [ | |
| CO2 Conditioning | 2.64 × 104 [ | 1.97 × 106 [ | N/A | ||
| CO2 Injection | 1.57 × 103 [ | N/A | N/A | ||
| CO2 Leakage | N/A | 3.53 × 106 [ | N/A |
*Carbon sequestration as negative and carbon equivalent emissions as a positive numbers.
Overview of exergy flow, emissions and land transformation by life cycle phase in a climate neutral coal plant outputting 376 TWhrs and utilizing EOR for an additional output of 491 TWhrs of electricity over the 50 year lifetime, totaling 866 TWhrs.
| Life Cycle Phase | Source/Sink | Exergyin (GWh) | Exergyout (GWh) | Emissions* ( | Land Transformation (ha) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Upstream with CCS | Mining | 9.21 × 104 [ | 2.94 × 107 [ | 1.82 × 104 [ | |
| Transport | 4.37 × 104 [ | 2.40 × 107 [ | 4.32 × 103 [ | ||
| Construction | 1.29 × 104 [ | 1.66 × 107 [ | N/A | ||
| Total | 1.49 × 105 [ | 5.34 × 107 [ | 2.27 × 104 [ | ||
| Operation with CCS | Plant | 1.37 × 106 [ | 3.76 × 105 | 6.07 × 107 [ | 2.02 × 102 [ |
| Downstream with CCS for EOR | Bio-sequestration | 2.13 × 108 [ | −3.11 × 108 [ | 2.84 × 105 [ | |
| CO2 Conditioning | 2.64 × 104 [ | 1.97 × 106 [ | N/A | ||
| Crude Oil Extraction | 8.76 × 103 [ | 3.51 × 107 [ | N/A | ||
| CO2 Injection/Recycling | 1.57 × 103 [ | 3.87 × 106 [ | N/A | ||
| Crude Oil Transport | 1.86 × 104 [ | 1.35 × 106 [ | N/A | ||
| Crude Oil Refining | 1.38 × 106 [ | 1.02 × 107 [ | N/A | ||
| Petroleum Combustion | N/A | 4.91 × 105 | 1.46 × 108 [ | N/A | |
| CO2 Leakage | N/A | 3.53 × 106 [ | N/A |
*Carbon sequestration as negative and carbon equivalent emissions as a positive numbers.
Overview of exergy flow, emissions and land transformation by life cycle phase in a climate neutral PV farm outputting 376 TWhrs of electricity over the 50 year lifetime.
| Life Cycle Phase | Source/Sink | Exergyin (GWh) | Exergyout (GWh) | Emissions* ( | Land Transformation (ha) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Upstream | Modules | 1.25 × 104 [ | 3.47 × 106 [ | 4.15 × 102 [ | |
| BOS | 7.36 × 103 [ | 5.45 × 106 [ | 1.69 × 102 [ | ||
| Construction | 7.16 × 101 [ | 2.52 × 105 [ | N/A | ||
| Total | 2.00 × 104 [ | 8.92 × 106 [ | 5.84 × 102 [ | ||
| Operation | Farm | 3.50 × 104 [ | 3.76 × 105 | 8.69 × 104 [ | 9.51 × 103 [ |
| CCS | Bio-Sequestration | 1.29 × 107 [ | −9.01 × 106 [ | 1.72 × 104 [ |
*Carbon sequestration as negative and carbon equivalent emissions as a positive numbers.
Overview of exergy flow, emissions and land transformation by life cycle phase in a climate neutral PV farm outputting 866 TWhrs of electricity over the 50 year lifetime.
| Life Cycle Phase | Source/Sink | Exergyin (GWh) | Exergyout (GWh) | Emissions* ( | Land Transformation (ha) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Upstream | Modules | 2.89 × 104 [ | 6.62 × 106 [ | 7.97 × 102 [ | |
| BOS | 1.70 × 104 [ | 1.04 × 107 [ | 3.25 × 102 [ | ||
| Construction | 1.43 × 102 [ | 5.81 × 105 [ | N/A | ||
| Total | 4.60 × 104 [ | 1.70 × 107 [ | 1.12 × 103 [ | ||
| Operation | Farm | 8.05 × 107 [ | 8.66 × 105 | 2.01 × 106 [ | 2.65 × 104 [ |
| CCS | Bio-sequestration | 2.59 × 107 [ | −1.72 × 107 [ | 3.45 × 104 [ |
*Carbon sequestration as negative and carbon equivalent emissions as a positive numbers.
Figure 2(a) Lifetime exergy input by life cycle phase comparing coal with and without capture into a saline aquifer and photovoltaics, each outputting 376 TWhrs. (b) Lifetime exergy input by life cycle phase comparing climate-neutral coal with EOR and climate-neutral photovoltaic plants, outputting 866 TWhrs. Error bars indicate boundary values.
Figure 3(a) Comparing LCA GHG emissions from a coal plant without carbon capture, a coal plant with saline aquifer CCS, and PVs1 farm. All use bio-sequestration to fully or partially sequester CO2 and all output 376 TWhrs of electricity. (b) Total LCA GHG emissions from a coal plant with CCS for EOR, and PVs2 farm. Both use bio-sequestration to fully or partially sequester CO2 and both net output 866 TWhrs of electricity over their lifetime.
Figure 4(a) To-scale visualization of GHG emissions by life cycle phase for coal without CCS, coal with CCS into a saline aquifer and PV, each outputting 376 TWhrs of electricity over their lifetimes. (b) To-scale visualization of GHG emissions by life cycle phase for, coal with CCS for EOR and PV, each outputting 866 TWhrs of electricity over their lifetimes.
Figure 5(a) Land transformation shown to scale in hectares for bio-sequestration required to provide for climate-neutral coal without CCS, coal with CCS into a saline aquifer and PV, each producing 376 TWhrs electricity over their lifetime. (b) Land transformation shown to scale in hectares for bio-sequestration required to provide for climate-neutral coal with CCS for EOR and PV, both producing 866 TWhrs electricity over their lifetime.
Construction exergy for large scale PV and coal electricity generation, each outputting 376 TWhrs over a 50 year lifetime.
| Material | Mass (tons)[ | Specific Exergy Input (GJ/ton)[ | Exergy Input (GWh)[ | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coal Plant | Steel | 6.22 × 104 | 3.20 | 5.57 × 101 |
| Aluminum | 6.24 × 102 | 3.87 × 101 | 6.76 | |
| Concrete | 1.78 × 105 | 8.16 × 10−1 | 4.07 × 101 | |
| Electricity | N/A | N/A | 1.27 × 104 | |
| Oil | 7.09 × 102 | 4.08 × 101 | 8.09 | |
| Coal | 1.43 × 104 | 6.83 × 10−6 | 9.80 × 101 | |
| Total | 2.56 × 105 | 1.29 × 104 | ||
| PV Farm | Steel | 1.04 × 103 | 3.20 | 9.26 × 10−1 |
| Aluminum | 4.00 × 101 | 1.63 × 102 | 1.82 | |
| Concrete | 5.00 × 102 | 1.07 | 1.50 × 10−1 | |
| Silicone | 5.00 × 101 | 5.71 × 103 | 7.99 × 101 | |
| Glass | 2.40 × 102 | 1.71 × 101 | 1.15 | |
| Copper | 1.08 × 102 | N/A | N/A | |
| Insulator | 9.20 × 101 | N/A | N/A | |
| Electricity | N/A | N/A | 1.70 | |
| Oil | 9.70 × 101 | 4.08 × 101 | 1.11 | |
| Coal | 2.90 × 101 | 6.83 × 10−6 | 5.55 × 10−8 | |
| Total | 2.19 × 103 | 8.68 × 101 |
GHG emission for the construction of a PV farm outputting 376 TWhrs over a 50 year lifetime.
| Material | Mass (ton)[ | Specific Emissions ( | Emissions ( |
|---|---|---|---|
| Steel | 1.04 × 103 | 2.25 × 102 | 2.33 × 105 |
| Aluminum | 4.00 × 101 | 8.80 | 3.52 × 102 |
| Concrete | 5.00 × 102 | 1.28 × 10−1 | 6.38 × 101 |
| Silicone | 5.00 × 101 | 3.30 × 102 | 1.65 × 104 |
| Glass | 2.40 × 102 | 1.34 | 3.22 × 102 |
| Insulator | 9.20 × 101 | N/A | N/A |
| Copper | 1.08 × 102 | N/A | N/A |
| Electricity | N/A | N/A | 1.38 × 103 |
| Oil | 9.70 × 101 | 3.88 | 3.77 × 102 |
| Coal | 2.90 × 101 | 1.60 | 4.64 × 101 |
| Total GHG Emissions | 2.19 × 103 | 2.52 × 105 |
Range of pulverized coal plant efficiencies equipped with various forms of carbon capture.
| Efficiencies | Min (%) | Max (%) | Realistic (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| MEA | 26.24[ | 29.90[ | 28.03[ |
| Membrane* | 27.23[ | 31.67[ | 29.77[ |
| Ammonia | 27.90[ | ||
| Other | 20.90[ | 33.36[ | 26.77[ |
*Membranes are either 2-stage or 2-stage with a 1 or 2 stage air sweep.
Carbon uptake rates of various types of biomass.
| Biomass Type | Value (tC/ha * yr) |
|---|---|
| Switchgrass | 6.0[ |
| Poplar | 5.4[ |
| Willow | 4.3[ |
| Woody Tissue | 3.8[ |
| Average US Forest | 0.7[ |