科技报告详细信息
Advanced Coal Wind Hybrid: Economic Analysis
Phadke, Amol ; Goldman, Charles ; Larson, Doug ; Carr, Tom ; Rath, Larry ; Balash, Peter ; Yih-Huei, Wan
关键词: 29;    CAPACITY;    CARBON;    CLIMATES;    COAL;    COAL GASIFICATION;    COMBINED CYCLES;    CONFIGURATION;    ECONOMIC ANALYSIS;    ECONOMICS;    ELECTRICITY;    GOVERNMENT POLICIES;    GREENHOUSE GASES;    POWER GENERATION;    POWER PLANTS;    POWER TRANSMISSION LINES;    PRODUCTION;    STORAGE;    WIND TURBINE ARRAYS wind hybrid;   
DOI  :  10.2172/944130
RP-ID  :  LBNL-1248E
PID  :  OSTI ID: 944130
Others  :  TRN: US200902%%881
美国|英语
来源: SciTech Connect
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【 摘 要 】
Growing concern over climate change is prompting new thinking about the technologies used to generate electricity. In the future, it is possible that new government policies on greenhouse gas emissions may favor electric generation technology options that release zero or low levels of carbon emissions. The Western U.S. has abundant wind and coal resources. In a world with carbon constraints, the future of coal for new electrical generation is likely to depend on the development and successful application of new clean coal technologies with near zero carbon emissions. This scoping study explores the economic and technical feasibility of combining wind farms with advanced coal generation facilities and operating them as a single generation complex in the Western US. The key questions examined are whether an advanced coal-wind hybrid (ACWH) facility provides sufficient advantages through improvements to the utilization of transmission lines and the capability to firm up variable wind generation for delivery to load centers to compete effectively with other supply-side alternatives in terms of project economics and emissions footprint. The study was conducted by an Analysis Team that consists of staff from the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL), National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL), National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), and Western Interstate Energy Board (WIEB). We conducted a screening level analysis of the economic competitiveness and technical feasibility of ACWH generation options located in Wyoming that would supply electricity to load centers in California, Arizona or Nevada. Figure ES-1 is a simple stylized representation of the configuration of the ACWH options. The ACWH consists of a 3,000 MW coal gasification combined cycle power plant equipped with carbon capture and sequestration (G+CC+CCS plant), a fuel production or syngas storage facility, and a 1,500 MW wind plant. The ACWH project is connected to load centers by a 3,000 MW transmission line. In the G+CC+CCS plant, coal is gasified into syngas and CO{sub 2} (which is captured). The syngas is burned in the combined cycle plant to produce electricity. The ACWH facility is operated in such a way that the transmission line is always utilized at its full capacity by backing down the combined cycle (CC) power generation units to accommodate wind generation. Operating the ACWH facility in this manner results in a constant power delivery of 3,000 MW to the load centers, in effect firming-up the wind generation at the project site.
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