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DOE - Fossil Energy Techline - Issued on: November 6, 2009 DOE Signs Cooperative Agreement for New Hydrogen Power PlantHydrogen Energy California to Construct IGCC Plant for Clean PowerWashington, D.C. The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) has signed a cooperative agreement with Hydrogen Energy California LLC (HECA) to build and demonstrate a hydrogen-powered electric generating facility, complete with carbon capture and storage, in Kern County, Calif. The new plant is a step toward commercialization of a clean technology that enables use of our countrys vast fossil energy resources while addressing the need to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
Approximately 90 percent of the CO2 produced from the gasification process, or about 2 million tons per year, will be transported via pipeline to the Elk Hills oilfield, less than four miles away. There it will be sequestered in the same underground formations that have trapped oil and gas for eons. By choosing oilfields as the CO2 injection site, oil production will be increased in a process known as enhanced oil recovery (EOR), and the CO2 will be safely sequestered from the atmosphere. According to the California Governor's Office, "This project . . . will not only create green collar construction jobs, but it will avoid greenhouse gas emissions and further propel us toward a clean energy future." Still other benefits will be realized from the new-concept plant:
The project is part of the Clean Coal Power Initiative (CCPI), a cost-shared collaboration between the federal government and private industry to increase investment in low-emission coal technology by demonstrating advanced coal-based power generation technologies prior to commercial deployment. The project will be cost-shared and administered by DOEs Office of Fossil Energy and the National Energy Technology Laboratory. The estimated capital cost for the project is approximately $2.3 billion. The federal cost-share is limited to $308 million, or just under 11 percent of the total project costs. The project consists of three phases: project definition (phase I), design and construction (phase II), and demonstration (phase III). Sequestration of 2 million tons per year of CO2 is slated to begin by 2016. - End of Techline
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