Stories tagged with coal gasification

The Round-Up: January 24th 2007

ASPO Canada: Schreyer leads new oil, gas study group

FORMER Manitoba Premier Ed Schreyer is leading a new organization that will educate, and warn, Canadians about dwindling petroleum reserves and global warming.
Schreyer and a distinguished panel of opinion leaders have formed the Canadian chapter of the Association for the Study of Peak Oil and Gas (ASPO), a global network that is studying both the state of oil reserves and the impact that oil and gas have on the environment.

Schreyer noted that 10 OECD countries have already established APSO chapters, and are in their own ways educating the broader public about the fact that oil and natural gas reserves are very likely more than half exhausted.

Information on Peak Oil can be found at ASPO Canada

Coal gasification in National Geographic

This month, National Geographic has an article called "The High Price of Cheap Coal" (you need to actually get the print magazine to read it, unfortunately). If you do a search for "coal gasification" on TOD, you'll see a lot of instances where it came up in the comments, but unless I skimmed by it, there's been no post on coal gasification itself. Just yesterday, Engineer Poet said that coal gasification is well-understood—so is it just cost that makes it fairly uncommon for power plants?

We have had a number of posts about the Fischer-Tropsch process here on TOD (e.g., here), and it should be pointed out that coal gasification is basically the first step on the way toward coal liquefaction. However, what I'm interested in here is the use of gasified coal in its own right, as a way of generating electricity.

As the MSM often does (if National Geographic can be called MSM), it takes a "better" technology and makes it sound like the end-all-and-be-all of our energy-related environmental problems. The relevant point here, as we all know, is that the US has tons of coal (we're the "Saudi Arabia of coal", of course), but traditional coal-burning power plants spit out all of that CO2 that's causing global warning (more than the all of the cars, trucks, and airplanes in the US combined, according to this article).

Jumping on the technology bandwagon

Not me...that would be Wired magazine.

Not surprisingly, I guess, the cover article of Wired for December is called "Why $5 Gas Is Good for America". Why, you ask? Well, because it's going to kickstart funding for new, clean, alternative technologies, of course.

I'm going to let you guys read this article and form your own opinions, but I did want to provide just a few reasons why this article managed to push my buttons.