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July - September 1999
Carbon Dioxide Emissions Trading:
Simplifying the Analysis
[Abstract]
[References]
Capturing Carbon Dioxide from Power Plants:
Cost-Effective Carbon Management?
[Abstract]
[References]
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ne of the hottest topics in recent climate-change
negotiations has been emissions trading. Under the Kyoto Protocol,
countries that face high costs to reduce emissions of carbon dioxide
(CO2) are allowed to pay countries with lower-cost opportunities to
make the reductions for them. An Energy Laboratory team has developed
an easy-to-interpret method of showing who would trade and how
specific nations would be affected. Using output from standard models
that simulate economic growth, energy use, and carbon emissions, the
researchers form "marginal abatement curves" that show the cost to a
given region of achieving cuts in CO2 emissions. By superimposing
curves for different regions, they can readily see which regions would
trade and how their costs would be affected. Analyses show that,
almost regardless of circumstances, all regions will benefit from
trading. The savings are enormous when the lowest-cost reducers--the
developing nations--participate. But costs drop considerably even when
trading is limited to the major regions of the Organization for
Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). In every case, nearly all
nations benefit some, and nations facing the highest costs benefit
most. The researchers are now performing analyses involving different
levels of economic and emissions growth and specific rules for trading
currently being considered. These analyses show, for instance, that
establishing ceilings on how much a nation can trade severely reduces
the overall gains from trading.
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.
ne way to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases is to capture
and permanently store the carbon dioxide (CO2) emitted by electric
power plants burning fossil fuels. However, current methods of
capturing CO2 are expensive; so a critical concern with CO2 "capture
and sequestration" is cost. Energy Laboratory researchers have
performed a methodical study of projected costs for capturing CO2 from
three types of power plants, two fueled by coal and one by natural
gas. According to their analyses, capturing CO2 could push up the cost
of generating electricity from 3.3¢/kWh to 5.2¢/kWh at a natural gas
plant and from 4.6¢/kWh to 6.0¢/kWh at a coal plant based on
gasification. At those costs, carbon capture promises to be a
less-expensive near-term option for carbon mitigation than switching
to solar and perhaps nuclear power. With technological advances
expected by 2012, incorporating capture could add less than 1¢/kWh to
the cost of electricity. Increasing power plant efficiency could
reduce the cost of capture substantially as it would lower both the
cost per kWh generated and the amount of CO2 emissions to be captured.
Interestingly, if carbon capture and sequestration are practiced, coal
plants may become more competitive with natural gas plants as
restrictions on carbon emissions tighten. The researchers are now
using MIT's Integrated Global System Model to perform more rigorous
analyses of how CO2 capture compares to other carbon-mitigation
options under various assumptions about the future.
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Last updated: 11/26/1999
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