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Tuesday, January 30, 2007

Cheaper Natural Gas from Coal

Continued from page 1

By Peter Fairley

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Meanwhile, Perlman says he is searching for a coal mine or refinery in the western United States to site Great Point's first plants. The idea is to produce natural gas close to oil producers who need the synthetic-gas plant's largest byproduct: carbon dioxide. Dakota Gasification has blazed this trail. Its synthetic-gas plant converts 18,000 tons of lignite coal into 170 million cubic feet of synthetic natural gas per day--enough to heat 2,500 homes for a year. But it also sells its CO2 to the aging oil fields of southeastern Saskatchewan, in the process burying more CO2 in a year than 100,000 cars release in their operational lifetime. (See "Carbon Dioxide for Sale.") "Our CO2, instead of being a liability, is actually a saleable byproduct," says Perlman, who estimates that oil producers in the west are willing to pay $20 to $40 per ton of CO2. That said, Perlman has not factored revenue from CO2 into his business plan. What is clear is the potential for coal. "The U.S. has 3 percent of the world's natural gas but 26 percent of the coal," he says. "Wyoming's coal could supply U.S. natural-gas needs for 100 years."

And natural-gas distributors are eager for the gas. Evansville, IN-based utility Vectren, which supplies gas and power to more than one million customers in Indiana and Ohio, has signed a 30-year deal to pay roughly $5 to $6 per million BTUs for synthetic gas from the $1.5 billion plant that GE hopes to build in Indiana. Vectren spokesman Mike Roeder acknowledges that there is a risk that the gas price could fall in the future, but he says the security of supply is worth it. "Reasonably priced gas has not been an option for our customers for at least the past five years," he says. "So we have a very strong interest in the project moving forward."

The attraction is clear: gasification of coal offers a fixed-price alternative to the volatility of natural-gas markets. Indiana officials note that natural gas from GE's plant at $5 to $6 per million BTUs would be well below the current price of $7.50 to $8.50 per million BTUs. Projecting that natural-gas prices will remain high, the officials estimate that GE's plant would save consumers more than $3.7 billion over the next 30 years. Therein lies the challenge in financing these plants: no one wants to be left on the hook if the natural-gas price crashes, as it did in the 1980s and '90s. Great Point Energy's simpler conversion process offers a safer bet, says Perlman, because it should deliver pipeline-quality gas from coal for less than $3 per million BTUs.

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  • Natural gas from coal
    protn7 on 01/30/2007 at 10:27 AM
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    Sequester all of the CO2 from power plants to get 20 in ten.
    Rate this comment: 12345
  • BURP
    abcarterjr on 01/30/2007 at 12:59 PM
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    45
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    4/5
    Liquidfied CO2 gas bomb underneath an oil tanker
    sinks ship in a burp of bubbles when bubbles
    dissipate ghost ship bobs up again??
    Rate this comment: 12345
    • Re: BURP
      abcarterjr on 01/30/2007 at 5:13 PM
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      45
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      Could high pressure CO2 fracture geothermal steam
      well fields into a reliable source of heat?
      Rate this comment: 12345
  • Not buying it
    westpower on 02/01/2007 at 11:48 PM
    Posts:
    1
    I knew guys working with exxon on this 20 years ago and they thought it was a doe boondoggle then.  They still think it is now. They couldn't get it to work, so how are these 28 year old kids from the software industry going to do it? sorry, not buying it.
    Rate this comment: 12345
    • Re: Not buying it
      bbindlepete on 03/24/2007 at 9:14 AM
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      1
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      1/5
      The field of catalytic chemistry has changed sincee the days of Exxon Donor Solvent. Have you kept up with the photocatalytic conversions? Sunlight and water to hydrogen and oxygen. A nice neat split. Close the loop with a fuel cell and off to tomorrow.

      Be well  
      Rate this comment: 12345
    • Re: Not buying it
      kiewolf on 04/21/2007 at 12:34 PM
      Posts:
      1
      I would guess that these 28 year old kids, much like Bill Gates did, have the technical imagination and scientific intellect to design just what they did.  If all engineers, scientists, and entrepenuers thought as you do, we would all still be riding horses and using the out house.
      Rate this comment: 12345
      • Re: Not buying it
        jabailo on 06/16/2007 at 9:25 PM
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        4
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        5/5

        Why is the Technology Review so obsessed with "Bill Gates"?   He never invented anything.
        Rate this comment: 12345
  • geography
    walt on 02/05/2007 at 1:09 AM
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    14
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    These guys a big-time operators:  they have moved the Powder River Basin from Wyoming to Illinois.
    Rate this comment: 12345
  • Comment
    mnlbison on 08/17/2007 at 5:48 AM
    Posts:
    1
    The technology was developed in the 1930's by the Germans as an alternative to oil, then further advanced by South Africa during the embargoes on that country. World GTL (gas-to-liquid) does the same thing with natural gas and a different catalyst in what is basically a methanol plant. GE is in a joint venture building many coal-to-diesel plants in China, so the technology is not pie-in-the-sky.
    Rate this comment: 12345
  • This plus Algae Growing solves the problem
    ecpioneer on 06/13/2008 at 7:38 PM
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    1
    The producers of natural gas from coal yield carbon dioxide. C02 is gold to Algae growers. We are ready to setup an Algae growing factory using our local pig farm manure and C02 in photobioreactors. We need the natural gas from coal and shale and convert cars to compressed natural gas for about 2000 usd. These 2 ideas alone could solve our energy problems. Where is our USA government leaders on this? We can easily have $2 a gallon fuel forever. Vote for me as president and this is how I will do it.
    Rate this comment: 12345
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