| 
 Jim Sconyers
 jim_scon@yahoo.com
 304.698.9628
 
 Remember: Mother Nature bats last.
 
 --- On Mon, 10/5/09, ROBERT KELLER <rkeller49@VERIZON.NET> wrote:
 
 From: ROBERT KELLER <rkeller49@VERIZON.NET>
 Subject: Re:
 FW: 1st Cement Plant CO2 Sequestration Project
 To: CONS-SPST-GLOBALWARM-CHAIRS@LISTS.SIERRACLUB.ORG
 Date: Monday, October 5, 2009, 2:16 PM
 
 
 
 
 
FYI - Virginia Coastal Energy Research Consortium 
(VCERC) has studied the engineering feasibility, cost, and economic development 
potential of Virginia’s offshore wind resource. These studies indicate that 
multi-megawatt wind turbines placed beyond sight of Virginia’s beaches could 
provide more than enough energy to meet 25% of the state’s electricity needs by 
2025, creating thousands of new jobs throughout the state, with a cost of energy 
less than that from a new coal-fired generating plant. George Hagerman 
is the Senior Research Associate at the Virginia Tech Advanced Research 
Institute in Arlington and VCERC Director of Research.  Members of the 
Virginia Chapter have met and talked with Hagerman who has been working on the 
project for about five years.  He has estimated, conservatively, that if 
Virginia had the will there could be wind turbines off the coast of Norfolk in 
six years (the Navy is looking at a wind turbine project in the area to help it 
meet its mandatory RPS).     Rick Keller Energy Chair, Mount Vernon Group, Virginia 
Chapter 
  ----- Original Message -----  Sent: Monday, October 05, 2009 11:52 
  AM Subject: Re: [GW-ACT-LEADERS] FW: 1st 
  Cement Plant CO2 Sequestration Project 
 
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  Listserv Lists support site for more information: 
  http://www.sierraclub.org/lists/faq.asp To view the Sierra Club List Terms 
  & Conditions, see: http://www.sierraclub.org/lists/terms.aspAlso, 90% of the 
  US population lives within 50 miles 
  of the coast, and the near constant sea breezes are a very reliable source of 
  energy.  Off shore turbines would probably would put electricity where 
  the population is.  Of course, efficiency first.  fm 
      
  
  
 From: 
  Chp & Grp Global Warming Energy 
  Chairs 
  [mailto:CONS-SPST-GLOBALWARM-CHAIRS@LISTS.SIERRACLUB.ORG] On Behalf Of Jim SconyersSent: Monday, October 05, 2009 11:13 
  AM
 To: 
  CONS-SPST-GLOBALWARM-CHAIRS@LISTS.SIERRACLUB.ORG
 Subject: Re: [GW-ACT-LEADERS] FW: 1st 
  Cement Plant CO2 Sequestration Project
    
    
    
      | Very nice analysis.Two thoughts:
 Offshore 
        wind is politically more palatable than onshore.
 There are plenty of 
        existing examples, just not in the
 US .
 
 Jim Sconyers
 jim_scon@yahoo.com
 304.698.9628
 
 Remember: 
        Mother Nature bats last.
 
 --- On Mon, 10/5/09, Ned Ford <Ned.Ford@FUSE.NET> 
        wrote:
 From: Ned Ford 
        <Ned.Ford@FUSE.NET>
 Subject: Re: FW: 1st Cement Plant CO2 
        Sequestration Project
 To: 
        CONS-SPST-GLOBALWARM-CHAIRS@LISTS.SIERRACLUB.ORG
 Date: Monday, 
        October 5, 2009, 12:28 AM
 
        In order to be precise, each specific project 
        must be evaluated, and then it doesn't always turn out as 
        expected.  The industry seems to have an average cost of about ten 
        cents per KWH from new state of the art plants in good locations.  
        I believe but cannot parse the data from where I sit, that this includes 
        the production tax credit, which effectively reduces the capital cost 
        even though it is applied to specific KWH's generated.  Offshore 
        wind is generally thought to cost about four cents more, of which maybe 
        two cents is recaptured due to the better wind thought to be 
        available.  There are very few existing offshore projects, and I 
        don't know when the ones that are under construction are going to be 
        completed, or when the industry will publicize useful 
        information.
 12 miles is a specific measure.  You would have 
        to look at the coastal maps and see how much shallow coast in good wind 
        areas there is.  I would think that in most places 12 miles 
        offshore would be very deep, and pointless to try to do.
 
 The more important point here is that onshore wind is presently 
        slightly cheaper than new coal without CCS, and that when you add the 
        price of CCS new coal becomes about as expensive as nuclear power or 
        solar PV.
 
 CCS is unlikely to become economic at any point 
        in time.  (Solar PV, by contrast, has a large potential to reduce 
        prices substantially - the difference is that with solar we can see 
        where research may help, and with CCS, there isn't much about it that 
        isn't already pretty well defined, especially the energy requirements of 
        compression and pumping).  These projects represent $3.4 billion 
        being spent on behalf of three major industries which collectively take 
        in about a trillion dollars a year (the petroleum and gas markets are so 
        volatile that if you want a more specific dollar amount you need to 
        specify the year).   The research projects which inject 
        post-combustion CO2 to enhance fossil fuel recovery are NOT CCS 
        projects, and it is good to see them included here because it 
        illustrates the lack of credibility that the entire group of projects 
        have.
 
 The more responsible projects here are ones such as 
        the C6 project which is injecting into a deep saline formation.  
        That doesn't mean it will work, and it doesn't mean it has a greater 
        likelihood of being economically viable.  It just means it isn't 
        obvious in the course of a summary paragraph that it is going to fail 
        the test of keeping the carbon out of the atmosphere for ten thousand 
        years, destroy any water tables or move toxic aromatics to the 
        surface.
 
 I think we have enough onshore wind to do most of what 
        wind can do for us.  Efficiency is the heavy lifter in the next 
        decade.  We can triple current levels by spending $9 billion per 
        year, which is about half of what we spent on wind last year.  
        Doing that will triple the energy savings of last year's wind, which was 
        nearly identical to last year's efficiency.  That level of 
        efficiency spending can be sustained for several decades.  We can 
        triple it again, if we really think it matters, in which case we might 
        run out of efficiency potential in less than twenty years (this level of 
        spending will eliminate electric sector CO2 in about 25 years). 
           I advocate spending as much as we can on efficiency, 
        because each dollar saves three.  Any rate increase to fund 
        efficiency pays for sustained efficiency for as long as we want to keep 
        on saving more money.  Part of the saving should be used to fund 
        more wind, and if we're good investors in about five years or so we 
        should have solar that is cheap enough to pick up the major action that 
        wind presently has.  Once that happens we get to eliminate just 
        about all CO2.  There are some concerns about how to get power in 
        the middle of the night, and while solar thermal answers that best in my 
        mind, there are other solutions.  But figuring that out is much 
        less important than recognizing that it doesn't matter how many coal 
        plants there are if we are cutting total use with efficiency, and 
        building as many renewables as we can afford to.  We've already 
        achieved our first year of net reductions, partly due to the recession 
        but partly due to efficiency and renewables.  We can keep it up, 
        and we do that best by concentrating on the right levels of investment 
        in efficiency and renewables.  CCS will never compete in that sort 
        of an environment.
 
 - Ned
 
 
 
 
 Dolph Honicker wrote:
 Has anyone done a study on how much it would 
        cost to put windmills 12 miles off our coast?.  A recent you 
        tube video by a Sierra Club representative detailed how they could 
        supply all the electricity the U.S. needs, and 
        quickly.  Capturing CO2 from coal fired plants does not 
        address the problem of mountain top removal.   I suggest that 
        we compare the costs of off shore windmills, the time it will take 
        to bring them on line in a big way, and calculate how much CO2 can be 
        eliminated as an alternative to this program. 
 Has 
        there been an eis?  There should be, as this is a major federal 
        action.  Alternatives must be examined in all eis's.    
        If we are serious about global warming, we will immediately act to solve 
        the problem.  We don't have 50 years to wait.  This is another 
        massive  subsidy for the petroleum and coal industries
 
 Jeannine Honicker
 
 
        
 Date: Sun, 4 Oct 
        2009 09:58:57 -0700From: doris@CELLARIUS.ORG
 Subject: 
        [GW-ACT-LEADERS] FW: 1st Cement Plant CO2 Sequestration Project
 To: 
        CONS-SPST-GLOBALWARM-CHAIRS@LISTS.SIERRACLUB.ORG
 
        .. 
        Secretary Chu on Carbon Capture .Public 
        support of CCS R&D is essential, and for this reason, $3.4 billion 
        of American Recovery and Reinvestment Act money is being invested by the 
        US Department of Energy (DOE) in CCS R&D...There are many hurdles to 
        making CCS a reality, but none appear insurmountable. The DOE goal is to 
        support R&D, as well as pilot CCS projects so that widespread 
        deployment of CCS can begin in 8 to 10 years. This is an aggressive 
        goal, but the climate problem compels us to act with fierce 
        urgency. 
        “ 
        
        DOE Makes First Awards from $1.4B for 
        Industrial Carbon Capture and Storage 
        Projects3 October 2009
        The US Department of Energy (DOE) has selected 12 projects for the first round of funding 
        from $1.4 billion from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act for 
        the capture carbon dioxide from industrial sources for storage or 
        beneficial use. The first phase of these projects will include $21.6 
        million in Recovery Act funding and $22.5 million in private funding for 
        a total initial investment of $44.1 million. The remaining Recovery Act 
        funding will be awarded to the most promising projects during a 
        competitive phase two selection 
        process. 
        Projects selected include large-scale industrial 
        carbon capture and storage projects that capture carbon dioxide 
        emissions from industrial sources—such as cement plants, chemical 
        plants, refineries, paper mills, and manufacturing facilities—and store 
        the carbon dioxide in deep saline formations=2 0and other geologic 
        systems.  --  
        The initial duration of each project selected is 
        approximately seven months. Projects will be subject to further 
        competitive evaluation in 2010 after successful comp letion of their 
        Phase 1 activities. Projects that best demonstrate the ability to 
        address their mission needs will be in the final portfolio that will 
        receive additional funding for design, construction, and operation. 
         
          
          
            | Secretary 
              Chu on Carbon 
          Capture |  
            | Energy 
              Secretary Steven Chu wrote an editorial for the 25 September 2009 special 
              issue of the journal Science on 
              carbon capture, in which he addressed the magnitude of the 
              challenge. |  
            | Noting 
              that coal accounts for roughly 25% of the world energy supply and 
              40% of the carbon emissions. Chu said that it was highly unlikely 
              that the US,
 Russia ,
 China and
 India , which account 
              for two-thirds of the coal reserves, “will turn their back 
              on coal anytime soon 
              .” |  
            | ...for 
              this reason, the capture and storage of CO2 emissions 
              from fossil fuel power plants must be aggressively 
              pursued. |  
            | ...The 
              scale of CCS needed to make a sign ificant dent in worldwide 
              carbon emissions is staggering. Roughly 6 billion metric tons of 
              coal are used each year, producing 18 billion tons of 
              CO2. In contrast, we now sequester a few million metric 
              tons of CO2 per year. At geological storage densities 
              of CO2 (0.6 kg/m3), underground 
              sequestration will require a storage volume of 30,000 
              km3/year. This may be sufficient storage capacity, but 
              more testing is required to demonstrate such capacity and 
              integrity. |  
            | ...We 
              should pursue a range of options for new coal-fired power plants 
              (such as coal gasification, burning coal in an oxygen atmosphere, 
              or post-combustion capture) to determine the most cost-effective 
              approach to burn fuel and reduce the total amount of 
              CO2 emitted. No matter which technology ultimately 
              proves best for new plants, we will still need to retrofit 
              existing plants and new plants that will be built before CCS is 
              routinely deployed. Each new 1-gigawatt coal plant is a 
              billion-dollar investment and, once built, will be used for 
              decades. |  
            | ...Public 
              support of CCS R&D is essential, and for this reason, $3.4 
              billion of American Recovery and Reinvestment Act money is being 
              invested by the US Department of Energy (DOE) in CCS 
              R&D...There are many hurdles to making CCS a reality, but none 
              appear insurmountable. The DOE goal is to support R&D, as well 
              as pilot CCS projects so that widespread deployment of CCS can 
              begin in 8 to 10 years. This is an aggressive goal, but the 
              climate problem compels us to act with fierce 
              urgency. 
               —Dr. 
              Steven Chu, Science |  
        Large-scale industrial carbon capture and 
        storage selections (by amount of DOE award) 
        include: 
        
          ConocoPhillips. 
          ConocoPhillips will demonstrate new advancements that improve 
          conversion efficiency and economies of scale for carbon capture 
          systems at a petcoke-based 683-megawatt integrated gasification 
          combined cycle (IGCC) power plant adjacent to its existing refinery in 
          Sweeny ,
 Texas . About 85% of the 
          CO2 from the process stream will be captured and over 5 
          million tons sequestered into a depleted oil or gas field. (DOE Share: 
          $3,014,666)  
        
          C6 Resources. 
          Objective is to capture and transport by pipeline approximately 1 
          million tons per year of CO2 streams from facilities 
          located in the Bay Area,
 Calif. , to be injected more than 2 
          miles underground into a saline formation. C6 Resources, an affiliate 
          of Shell Oil Company, will conduct the project in collaboration with 
          Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and Lawrence Livermore National 
          Laboratory. (DOE Share: $3,000,000)  
        
          Shell Chemical Capital Company. The objective 
          of this project is to capture, condition, and transport by pipeline 
          approximately 1 million tons per year of by-product and off-gas 
          CO2 streams from facilities located along the Mississippi 
          River between Baton Rouge and
 New Orleans for 
          geologic storage. (DOE Share: $3,000,000) 
           
        
          Wolverine Power Supply Cooperative 
          Inc. Investigators will demonstrate 
          advanced amines and additives supplied by
 Hitachi and Dow 
          to capture 300,000 tons of CO2 per year. Wolverine Power 
          Supply Cooperative will be building a 600-megawatt circulating 
          fluidized bed power plant near Rogers City, Mich. (DOE Share: 
          $2,723,512)  
        
          
University of
 Utah. More than 1 million tons 
          of CO2 per year will be captured from various industrial 
          sources, compressed, and transported via two new intra-state pipelines 
          for CO2 enhanced oil recovery and deep saline sequestration 
          research in
 Kansas . Beneath each enhanced oil 
          recovery target, a major saline aquifer spanning most of the State of 
          Kansas will be used for 
          CO2 injection. (DOE Share: $2,696,556) 
         
        
          Praxair Inc. 
          Praxair will partner with BP Products North America, Denbury 
          Resources, and
 Gulf
 Coast
 Carbon
 Center to demonstrate capture 
          and sequestration of CO2 emissions from an existing 
          hydrogen-production facility in an oil refinery into underground 
          formations for CO2 enhanced oil recovery. This 
          demonstration will be performed at the BP refinery, and a lateral 
          pipeline will be built to connect to Denbury’s Green Pipeline to 
          transport 1 million tons of CO2 per year. (DOE Share: 
          $1,719,464)  
        
          Archer Daniels Midland 
          Corporation. Archer Daniels Midland 
          Company, a member of DOE’s Midwes t Geological Sequestration 
          Consortium, will partner with other research organizations to 
          demonstrate Dow ALSTOM’s advanced amine process to capture 
          CO2 from industrial flue gases and sequester the 
          CO2 in the Mt. Simon Sandstone reservoir. (DOE Share: 
          $1,480,656)  
        
          CEMEX Inc. CEMEX 
          USA will partner 
          with RTI International to demonstrate a dry sorbent CO2 
          capture technology at one of its cement plants in the 
          United 
          States . CEMEX will design and 
          construct a dry sorbent CO2 capture and compression system, 
          pipeline (if necessary), and injection station. This commercial-scale 
          carbon capture and sequestration demonstration project will remove up 
          to 1 million tons of CO2. (DOE Share: 
          $1,137,885)  
        
          Air Products and Chemicals 
          Inc. A system to concentrate CO2 
          from two steam methane reformer waste streams will be designed, 
          constructed, and demonstrated at
 Port Arthur ,
 Texas . More than 1 million tons of 
          CO2 will be delivered per year via pipeline for 
          sequestration into the Oyster Bayou oilfield for enhanced oil recovery 
          by Denbury Onshore LLC. (DOE Share: $961,499) 
 
        
          Leucadia Energy 
          LLC. Leucadia Energy and Denbury Onshore 
          will demonstrate advanced technologies that capture and sequester 
          CO2 emissions from an industrial source. Mississippi 
          Gasification LLC, a Leucadia affiliate, is building a 
          petcoke-to-substitute natural gas plant in
 Moss Point ,
 Miss. , to demo nstrate large-scale 
          recovery, purification and compression of 4 million tons per year of 
          CO2. (DOE Share: $840,000)  
        
          Leucadia Energy 
          LLC. Partnered with Denbury Onshore, 
          Leucadia Energy will demonstrate advanced technologies that capture 
          and sequester more than 4 million tons of CO2 emissions at 
          the Lake Charles co-generation 
          petroleum coke-to-chemicals (methanol) project to be located near 
          Lake Charles , 
          La. The project will 
          transport compressed CO2 through a 12-mile pipeline that 
          connects to Denbury’s Green Line pipeline system in
 Louisiana so that it can be used for enhanced 
          oil recovery in the Hastings and Oyster Bayou oilfields in
 Texas . (DOE 
          Share: $540,000)  
        
          Battelle Memorial Institute,
 Pacific Northwest 
          Division. Battelle researchers will partner 
          with Boise White Paper LLC and Fluor Corporation to demonstrate 
          geologic CO2 storage in deep flood basalt formations in the 
          State of
 Washington . Fluor Corporation will 
          design a customized version of its Econamine Plus carbon capture 
          technology for operation with the specialized chemical composition of 
          exhaust gases produced from combustion of black liquor fuels. (DOE 
          Share: $500,00 0)  
        Additionally, the Department has also made 
        conditional selections of 16 projects that demonstrate innovative 
        concepts for beneficial carbon dioxide use. These conditional selections 
        are subject to additional merit reviews and technical evaluation. 
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