Assessing
Best Practices in Natural Gas Production
and Emerging CO2 Capture Techniques to Minimize the Carbon
Footprint of Electricity Generation
Posted on 2024-11-16 - 15:09
Natural gas (NG)
is expected to provide a substantial portion of
electricity generation in many jurisdictions for the foreseeable future.
Postcombustion carbon capture and storage (CCS) effectively abates
direct CO2 emissions; however, indirect NG supply chain
emissions in most jurisdictions are incompatible with climate change
mitigation goals. This life cycle assessment evaluates specific opportunities
to reduce the carbon footprint of combined cycle gas turbine (CCGT)
generation with CCS using existing low-emission NG production practices,
technologies, and processes combined with emerging CCS techniques
to achieve high CO2 capture rates and mitigate startup
emissions. We find baseload life cycle greenhouse gas (GHG) emission
intensity ranges from 22 to 62 kgCO2e/MWh for 95–98.5%
CO2 capture, within the range of published estimates for
wind and photovoltaic power and considerably below prior estimates
of CCGT with CCS. Low-emission NG production practices reduce other
environmental impacts, which are dominated by combustion-related air
pollution. We also show how interim solvent storage can effectively
mitigate emissions from CCGT start/stop cycles. This work highlights
the importance of mitigating both CO2 and methane emissions
from NG supply chains and proposes a more nuanced discussion regarding
the potential contribution of NG to the future energy supply. A surrogate
model is provided to estimate life cycle GHG emissions for CCGT with
CCS and user-input parameters.
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Cownden, Ryan; Lucquiaud, Mathieu (1753). Assessing
Best Practices in Natural Gas Production
and Emerging CO2 Capture Techniques to Minimize the Carbon
Footprint of Electricity Generation. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.4c02933