http://www.grist.org/news/muck/2005/12/16/muck/index.html?source=daily
 
 Grist Magazine:   Coal Reversal
 
 Climate campaigners warm to "advanced coal" and sequestration, despite  Bush backing
 
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 By Amanda Griscom Little,  16 Dec 2005
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 Bush administration officials tried their darnedest to derail the
 international climate-change negotiations that wrapped up in Montreal last  week. But in the midst of their bombastic no-no-no-ing, they did offer up  one constructive idea -- a $950 million partnership between the U.S.  Department of Energy and industry leaders to build FutureGen, a "prototype  of the fossil-fueled power plant of the future" -- perhaps hoping it would  help redeem their negative image.
 
 It didn't work.
 
 "It was an inappropriate attempt at distraction," said Greenpeace
 energy-policy specialist John Coequyt, who attended the Montreal talks,
 "while [Bush reps] squirmed under pressure from other industrialized
 countries to provide evidence of some kind of a meaningful or concrete
 strategy related to climate."
 
 Oh, and it wasn't a new idea either.
 
 The FutureGen project was first proposed in 2003. The new development
 being touted this month is simply that the Bushies have brought aboard
 partners from the energy sector, including American Electric Power,
 Southern Company, and Foundation Coal, that will collectively contribute
 $250 million to the project. The bulk of the $620 million that the DOE
 plans to pony up on its own was allotted in the energy bill that passed
 this past August. The feds hope to get the rest of the needed money from  other energy R&D funds and an unnamed group of "international partners."
 
 FutureGen aims to build a soup-to-nuts demonstration facility that would  generate virtually zero-emission (yes, zero emission!) electricity from  coal -- billed by industry as "clean coal" -- within the next decade. It  would use "integrated gasification combined-cycle" (IGCC) power-plant  technology that first pressurizes coal to produce a vapor, then filters  carbon dioxide and smog-causing pollutants from the gas before burning it. 

 The captured greenhouse gases would then be stored underground where they  couldn't contribute to atmospheric warming -- a technique known as  "sequestration."
 
 "FutureGen would be the first demonstration plant in the world to combine  the coal gasification process with carbon capture and sequestration," DOE  spokesperson Drew Malcomb told Muckraker.
 
 The Winnning Coal
 
 It's a far cry from a commitment to reduce greenhouse-gas emissions.  Still, on the face of it, FutureGen sounds pretty good.
 
 In recent years, the IGCC concept has garnered support from an increasing  number of environmental advocates, who prefer to call it "advanced" or  "cleaner coal." These folks say coal can't realistically be phased out  within the next couple of decades, so we should be using it more  efficiently and cleanly while we transition to renewable energy sources. 

 And they say carbon sequestration could play a key role in making coal
 more palatable.
 
 Like it or not, a future without coal is politically implausible in the
 near term, says David Hawkins, director of the climate program at the
 Natural Resources Defense Council:"While as a technical matter we could
 run the world's economy without coal, as a political matter it is not
 going to happen fast enough. The fuel's abundance and low cost make it
 something that most political leaders are unwilling to give up." About 50
 percent of the electricity in the U.S. is coal-powered, and coal is the
 top power source in many fast-developing countries. "We must do everything  we can to accelerate our use of renewables, but the renewable-energy  future is far too slow in coming to put all our eggs in that basket,"  Hawkins argues. "We have to start reducing greenhouse gases before we  phase out fossil fuels."
 
 Coequyt of Greenpeace is far more critical. He's concerned that unresolved  questions about sequestration -- including possible leakage from storage  reservoirs and acidification of underground water supplies -- are getting  lost in all the boosterism.
 
 There's also the reality that coal -- whether burned in dirty old plants
 or gasified in high-tech new ones -- is generally extracted using
 environmentally harmful methods. "Let's not forget that when you're
 talking about coal you're talking about mountaintop mining," says Coequyt. 

 He cautions that enviros who support advanced coal "need to clarify their  message, because otherwise they are implicitly supporting things they  don't really condone."
 
 Vision Sequester
 
 These concerns are shared by many. Nonetheless, carbon sequestration is  getting a lot of attention these days from folks who take the climate
 challenge seriously.
 
 The concept was talked up heavily in Montreal, according to Coequyt. "The  emphasis on coal and carbon storage was far more pronounced than the  emphasis on solar, wind, and other renewables," he says. "It was all over  the place."
 
 Some of that interest was driven by a report on carbon dioxide capture and  storage released two weeks prior to the Montreal conference by the
 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. (This is the same esteemed
 group that released a widely cited 2001 report stating the consensus of
 some 2,000 climate scientists that much of global warming is attributable  to human activities.) The new report is a whirlwind tour of potential  methods for siphoning carbon from fossil-fuel energy sources and stowing  it underground or in the oceans.
 
 "IPCC has brought a credibility to the steadily growing awareness that
 advanced coal and carbon sequestration need to be taken seriously," said  Jeff Fiedler, a policy specialist with the Climate Center at NRDC, the
 green group that has been more outspoken than any other in its support for  advanced coal.
 
 The report was not necessarily a green light, though, Fiedler cautions:
 "It does raise unresolved technical, economic, and policy-related
 questions about the technology's viability, but still confirms its
 potential to be a key component of climate strategy."
 
 Among the members of the IPCC review panel for the report was NRDC's
 Hawkins. He was particularly impressed by data regarding the total
 capacity of underground reservoirs worldwide that could be used for carbon  sequestration -- porous rock into which CO2 could be injected. "The  findings show that you could take a very large chunk of the world's CO2  output for the next 100, possibly even 200, years and stow it in these  reservoirs," explains Hawkins. "It allows the [sequestration] tool to be a  significant player in the effort to cut global warming. Perhaps it could  handle as much as a third of the reduction task, but meanwhile we need to  work just as hard or harder on the other tools: efficiency and
 renewables."
 
 The day of the FutureGen announcement, the BBC reported that the U.K.'s  top science adviser, Sir David King -- a veritable Paul Revere of climate  science -- expressed unqualified support for carbon capture and
 sequestration, saying it's the only way to offset the inevitable surge in
 coal-burning in China and India. These two major emerging economies have  copious coal supplies and are currently building on average at least one  major coal-fired power plant every two weeks, according to Hawkins.
 
 Back to the FutureGen
 
 While experts in a growing number of green groups like NRDC, the World
 Resources Institute, and the Sierra Club are opening up to the idea of
 advanced coal and carbon sequestration, that still doesn't translate into
 an endorsement of the Bush administration's FutureGen plan. Many U.S.
 activists see it as a costly and slow-moving PR gambit rather than a
 straightforward bid to advance cleaner energy production.
 
 "FutureGen is to advanced coal what the FreedomCAR is to hydrogen," says  NRDC's Fiedler, "a fancy demonstration project that amounts to a lot of  long-term envisioning and little near-term action."
 
 Instead of lavishing nearly a billion dollars on a full-scale prototype
 with a projected completion date of 2012, Fiedler argues that the funds
 would be better spent on research into sequestration technology, which is  still in early-stage development. "Coal gasification is not the technical
 challenge right now. There are vendors who will sell you that technology
 tomorrow. What we don't know is how to make the carbon capture and storage  part work," he says.

 According to DOE's Malcolm, the department has devoted $178 million to
 carbon-sequestration R&D since 2001, and President Bush has requested an  additional $67 million for 2006. Still, critics say, little of this has
 been spent on the kind of demonstration projects that are necessary to
 prove the technology.
 
 "Rather than do one full-scale facility [with the FutureGen funds],"
 argues Fiedler, "the DOE should be doing five demonstrations of carbon
 capture and storage using existing streams of CO2."
 
 Indeed, the clock is ticking on advanced-coal and carbon-capture
 technology -- more so than on other potential climate solutions given the  alarming rate at which coal plants are being built in the developing
 world. But there's still time to preempt the potential damage: according
 to Fiedler, of the thousands of coal plants that are projected to come
 online worldwide between now and 2030, two-thirds have yet to be built.
 
 By the time 2012 rolls around and the FutureGen project is completed,
 however, much of this damage will be done. Says Fiedler, "If the Bush
 administration is serious about proving this technology, they either need
 to do it now or not bother."
 
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 Amanda Griscom Little writes Grist's Muckraker column on environmental  politics and policy and interviews green luminaries for the magazine. Her  articles on energy and the environment have also appeared in publications  ranging from Rolling Stone to The New York Times Magazine.
 
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Thanks to Dan Derber and Don Strimbeck for this update.....
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