Mr. W's EnviroBlog

thoughts on environmental awareness and action


Making and Capturing Carbon from Coal

A student send me a wonderful 12-minute bit from 60 minutes on coal power.  The piece is centered on Jim Rogers and Duke Energy.  Watch this, then read on:

*IF the embedded video will not play, try this link:  Powered by Coal (60 minutes)

So…what do we do in the short term?  Build the “cleanest” coal-powered plants we can build AND try to capture the carbon in the ground?  Regardless of our efforts, does it matter if China is not even trying while starting up one new coal-fired power plant A WEEK?!

NPR recently posted a wonderful series on called Power Hungry: Reinventing the U.S. Power Grid.  While some place great hopes in wind and solar, the fact remains that coal (and nuclear) provide reliable sources of power for our grid.  In the segment, Constant Challenge: Constant Current from Fickle Winds, NPR exposes the main limitations of putting our hopes in wind:

At the Midwest ISO’s control room in Carmel, Ind., talk of a major increase in wind power sends chills down the spine of Rob Benbow, a grid manager. Before dawn on a spring morning, Benbow and a few dozen grid operators are shouting electricity jargon at each other in front of a massive curved screen that’s 20 feet high and 150 feet long.

As people in the Midwest wake up and turn on coffee makers and hair dryers, the operators make sure enough power is being generated to match the surge in demand. A warning signal alerts them that a power plant has unexpectedly turned off. This time, it is someone else’s problem. But Benbow worries that when wind power makes up a significant portion of his grid’s electricity, managing it will cause him frequent problems.

“My biggest fear is if you see 20 percent wind on your system, and then it comes off at a time period where you don’t have resources to replace it — that’s going to, could, result in a blackout situation,” he says.

Wind power is not predictable. That morning, the wind is steadily producing about 3,000 megawatts — about 5 percent of the total power being used in the region. But Benbow says he’s seen wind power become increasingly variable as more wind farms come on line. And grid operators can’t order wind plants to produce like they can other power plants.

“If the wind is not blowing, you just don’t have that resource available,” he says. And when the wind is blowing, it can be hard to make wind turbines shut down. “A lot of these plants are not manned — if we need to turn them off, we have to send a person out to actually do that,” he says.

Lots of other things about wind frustrate the Benbows of the world — wind blows hardest at night when electricity demand is lowest, there currently aren’t ways to store wind for later use, and you can’t count on it on hot summer days when you need it most.

“You can put all that wind in, but I still need to have all this other generation that I need to have available — all my coal, nuclear, all the gas — for my peak load day,” Benbow adds.

So, what do we do?

Removing Mountains (and digging in them)

Earlier this week, I tried to give you a sense of just how destructive strip mining can be to habitats and biodiversity.  I found a great slideshow by a photographer named Daniel Shea on NPR.  There are only 15 slides, and it is worth the 30 seconds of your time to take a look at the impact of mountaintop removal on rural Appalachia.  This has really become an environmental justice issue in West Virginia and Kentucky.  If you want to read great (but depressing) book on the issue sometime, try Lost Mountain, by Erik Reese.
For folks who live near these mining sites, it is very hard to believe in such as thing as “clean coal.”

Mountaintop removal/valley fill coal mining in southern West Virginia in May 2003 Photo by Vivian Stockman, May 30, 2003

Mountaintop removal/valley fill coal mining in southern West Virginia in May 2003 Photo by Vivian Stockman, May 30, 2003

http://www.ohvec.org/galleries/mountaintop_removal/007/

The EPA is currently taking a hard look at destructive mountaintop removal mining practices.  A federal judge in West Virginia took steps to block some types of permits for the practice earlier this week.  NPR has a short report on this legal action too.

Subsurface coal mining has its own set of issues.  When you have time check out this 40 minute episode of “30 Days” with Morgan Spurlock (the “Supersize Me” guy):