Clean Coal Subsidies
This article is part of the Global Energy Monitor coverage of "clean coal." |
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U.S. Clean Coal Power Initiative (CCPI)
According to the U.S. Department of Energy:
- "The Clean Coal Power Initiative (CCPI) is a 10-year, $2 billion program designed to support the Clean Coal Technology Roadmap milestones with the government providing up to 50 percent of the cost of demonstrating a range of promising technologies. CCPI is implemented through a series of five solicitations over the 10-year period, two of which have already been issued and selections made. CCPI provides the means to demonstrate those technologies proven through R&D to have commercial potential. Demonstrations are at a commercial scale in actual operating environments, which is essential to moving them to the threshold of commercialization."[1]
As of April, 2008, 8 projects were active and 4 had been withdrawn.[2]
According Department of Energy Fact Sheet, the multi-year Clean Coal Power Initiative (CCPI), "is driven by private-sector-proposed projects in response to a government solicitation. Potential applicants include technology developers, service corporations, R&D firms, energy producers, software developers, academia, and other interested parties. The private sector cost share must be at least 50 percent. Funding is awarded to applicants, selected as a result of these open competitions, who can rapidly move promising new concepts to a point where private-sector decisions on deployment can be made." [3]
Round I participants:[4]
- Great River Energy, Underwood, ND - Increasing Power Plant Efficiency–Lignite Fuel Enhancement
- NeuCo, Inc., Boston, MA - Demonstration of Integrated Optimization Software at the Baldwin Energy Complex
- University of Kentucky Research Foundation, Lexington, KY - Advanced Multi-Product Coal Utilization By-Product Processing Plant
- WMPI PTY., LLC, Gilberton, PA - Gilberton Coal-to-Clean Fuels and Power Co-Production Project
- Western Greenbrier Co-Generation, LLC, Lewisburg, WV - Western Greenbrier Co-Production Demonstration Project
- Wisconsin Electric Power Co., Milwaukee, WI - TOXECON Retrofit for Mercury and Multi-Pollutant Control on Three 90 MW Coal-Fired Boilers
Round II participants:[5]
- Excelsior Energy, Inc., Minnetonka, MN - Mesaba Energy Project
- Pegasus Technologies, Incorporated, Chardon, OH - Mercury Specie and Multi-Pollutant Control
- Southern Company Services, Birmingham, AL - Demonstration of a 285-MW Coal-Based Transport Gasifier
2011 US DOE funding
On Sep. 13, 2011, the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) awarded $14 million to six projects aimed at being integrated gasification combined cycle (IGCC) coal-fired power plants using carbon capture: Electric Power Research Institute Inc. (Palo Alto, Calif.); TDA Research, Inc. (Wheat Ridge, Colo.); two for projects by General Electric (Houston, Texas); Air Products and Chemicals Inc. (Allentown, Pa.); and Reaction Engineering International (REI) (Salt Lake City, Utah).[6]
Resources
References
- ↑ "Clean Coal Power Initiative," National Energy Technology Laboratory website, accessed April 2008
- ↑ "Clean Coal Power Initiative," National Energy Technology Laboratory website, accessed April 2008
- ↑ "Program Facts," Department of Energy fact sheet, accessed April 2008 (PDF File)
- ↑ "Program Facts," Department of Energy fact sheet, accessed April 2008 (PDF File)
- ↑ "Program Facts," Department of Energy fact sheet, accessed April 2008 (PDF File)
- ↑ "Clean coal power projects awarded $14 million from DOE" Power Engineering, Sep. 13, 2011.
Related GEM.wiki articles
- Estimating U.S. Government Subsidies to Energy Sources 2002-2008
- Federal coal subsidies
- State coal subsidies
- Carbon Capture and Storage
- Clean Coal
- Clean Coal Marketing Campaign
- Clean Coal Technology
- Global warming