Can Coal Be Green? 137
wap writes "A coal-industry sponsored group, Americans for Balanced Energy Choices thinks coal is green, and has been running television ads to make its point. The ad shows an eagle unable to fly because of smog, and then talks about how much cleaner coal is now and will be in the future, with a sub-title saying that this is because of EPA regulation. Coal burning is much cleaner now than it was due to new scrubbing technologies, but it still emits just as much carbon dioxide as ever. Carbon emissions can be reduced by increased efficiency through gasification, but the only way to stop coal from emitting carbon dioxide is carbon sequestration. Everyone agrees that sequestration is expensive, but not everyone agrees that it's even effective in the long term. Should we instead follow the suggestion of James Lovelock and go nuclear as has been discussed here before?"
Sorry (Score:4, Informative)
This is an astroturfing [disinfopedia.org]-free zone, people. Move along, nothing to see here...
hmm. (Score:1)
from the not-really dept.
figures.
what about... (Score:4, Insightful)
In different words: the answer is that we should neither build more nuclear plants nor more coal power plants because neither is necessary.
Re:what about... (Score:2)
That said, as the population increases, you will have to increase efficiency at least as quickly as the population grows, just to
Re:what about... (Score:2)
You're probably thinking that natural gas, at least, can be piped there with little transmission losses, and no trucks involved. Well, perhaps. But even if yo
Re:what about... (Score:2)
Until we figure out how to extarct methane hydrates.
Re:what about... (Score:2)
Re:what about... (Score:2)
Re:what about... (Score:2)
Figure that out and we'll be the next "middle east"
Re:what about... (Score:2)
Re:what about... (Score:2)
Re:what about... (Score:2)
Re:what about... (Score:2)
Re:what about... (Score:2)
Re:what about... (Score:2)
Re:what about... (Score:1)
does this include the long term where energy usage and population continue to increase?
Re:what about... (Score:2)
No. If humans can't figure out their current rate of growth is unsustainable, then there isn't much hope for us, is there? We'll run out of space, we'll run out of food, we'll run out of power, we'll run out of fresh water, we'll run out of oxygen. Besides, all developed nations that I know of are either very close to, or have fallen below the rate of self-sustaining childbirth. They are all growing only because of immi
Re:what about... (Score:3, Insightful)
Well, not really. According to this FAQ [stanford.edu] on nuclear energy, with efficient reprocessing of nuclear fuel the Earth's uranium supplies will last upwards of a billion years. That's a million times longer than the longest estimates for how long our fossil fuel supply will last us.
And excluding nuclear weapons, nuclear power has caused very few deaths compared to the coal industry from mining alone, neve
Re:what about... (Score:2)
Generating energy has high non-wage costs associated with it, while energy conservation does not. That's how energy conservation can create jobs and still save money.
So yes, new sources of energy will have to be created
I don't see why. We should instead adapt our energy usage to what we can generate sustainably and without too much risk.
Re:what about... (Score:2)
You have to account for the costs associated with safety, security, risk, insurance, and disposal. Once you do, nuclear energy becomes astronomically expensive. The only reasons why it look attractive right now is because (1) the tax payer foots a lot of the bill, and (2) nuclear plants are just pretending the enormous costs associated with disposal don't exist.
But if you were using it to
Re:what about... (Score:2)
Compared to that, transmission losses are nothing. I mean it.
As per your population increasing, that's a bunch of bull too. Energy consumption is increasing by about 3% per year in the US. That might not sound like a lot, but you're not able to build new power plants fast
Re:what about... (Score:2)
A programmable thermostat helps, but in the summer, not as much as you might think due to some nonlinear effects (that is, allowing the temperature to rise 20 degrees and then cooling it by 20 degrees may use as much energy than holding it at the lower temp
Re:what about... (Score:2)
Ok, and what of the energy we do need? Shall that come from coal anyway?
The point is, that we do need energy, and it has to come from somwhere. However much energy this is, we could always choose to either use coal or nuclear, so which do you want. Whether we're choosing to use it for one Watt or one million Watts doesn't really matter. Each Watt needs to come from somwhere, and it is absolute retardation to think that using half as much energy will some how make the energy we do use miraculously come from
Re:what about... (Score:2)
Yes: in the long term, we should move to a mixture of biologically grown fuel, wind, and solar energy (transported in the form of hydrogen).
Coal, oil, and nuclear simply are not sustainable.
Basically, these are two different problems,
The two problems are quite related: there is a limit to how much energy we can generate sustainably using current technologies.
Re:What the hell are you talking about? (Score:2)
The reason for looking for cleaner energy and reducend energy consumption isn't so we can all sit around and pretend our farts smell like roses.
The idea is to reduce pollution and all of the bad things it does. (And if you don't think pollution from burning things like coal is a problem, go look at any old sculpture or building in an area where acid rain is an issue and try to say t
Re:What the hell are you talking about? (Score:2)
That's not what he said at all. In fact, if you actually read both your and the parent post, you'd see that you two don't actually disagree very much.
He said that whether or not you conserve energy, you still need to look for cleaner sources of energy, because you still need energy (which reduces pollution, so apparently you are for it). By contrast, the grandparent seemed to be implying t
Re:what about... (Score:2)
The next time you want to post to a website and expect an international audience of millions of readers... you better be hand delivering a hand written letter having used hand made ink and paper, otherwise you're a hypocrite...
or
The next time you want to post to a website and expect an international audience of millions of readers... you better be sitting on a bike generator in the dark while you u
Re:what about... (Score:2)
If the US government leads the way with solar panels, compact flourescent light, and simply cutting consumption and waste, I wouldn't mind doing my part to help.
On the other hand, if the government would spend a whole lot less, and tax a whole lot less, maybe I could afford to buy those solar panels and get my house off the grid. If enough people do this, the prices would drop overall.
Until then, I'll s
Re:what about... (Score:2)
And certainly, the FAQ on energy use [stanford.edu] you referred to deserves to be made into a link.
(Honestly, why do
- Peter
Slashdot editorial neutrality (Score:1)
Re:Slashdot editorial neutrality (Score:2)
Favorite source of energy?:
1. Wind
2. Coal
3. Nuclear
4. Geothermal
5. Cowboy Neal on an exercise bike hooked to a generator
The question is not "Can Coal Be Green?" (Score:2)
Coal can still be "Green" by some standards and yet still be a horrible source of pollution.
The question should be "Can coal be green enough that we should choose it over other 'green' technologies?'
Better some green than none. (Score:2)
Wrong question gives you the wrong answer (Score:2)
I suggest that the question should be "Given that we cannot eliminate coal use in less than 20 years, what are the greenest technologies available for using it?"
I expect that we are going to wind up powering our transportation with coal again (but via electric power rather than on-board coal-fired steam; it only takes 200 GW or so [blogspot.com]) before we can move to nuclear and renewables. We'll do this to deal
Coal *Is* clean! (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Coal *Is* clean! (Score:2)
Re:Coal *Is* clean! (Score:2)
No, it can't... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:No, it can't... (Score:1)
Anyone who's listened to old radio... (Score:2)
Ok, first the obvious.. (Score:4, Interesting)
But seriously, there is now a massive power struggle for power - all the different interest groups are jockeying for position to be the next big "green" fuel.
My own 2c (per kw/hour) is that the very simple obvious non-polluting green alternatives - wind, tide, wave, solar, etc - have quietly evolved to a stage where they could take over as the western worlds main source of energy. Why do we need to mess around with nuclear/coal/oil? All the supporting technologies have developed sufficiently that they are either already economical, or at worse should be soon with a little more work. If you just take wind alone, the latest batch of offshore wind farms are contracted to supply power to the UK grid at 0.03 pounds/kilowatt/hour - pretty competitive, and set to come down with scale. (British Wind Energy Association page) [bwea.com] (American Wind Energy Association page) [awea.org]
The latest windmills do not present loading problems for the grid, probably kill less wildlife than other things (ie tall structures in general, glass windows, cars, oil rigs etc..) & do not really mess up the landscape for 99.99% of people.
The UK alone has many times its energy needs already available in potential off-shore sites. The USA and Australia have similar huge (and worryingly largely unsurveyed) potentials - off & on shore.
And then you can look at other sources - tide, wave, solar.. For instance, Australia is building 1 km high towers [wired.com] that can generate power by solar power.
Ok, back to coal - can it be green? Well if you can safely bury 100% (or close to) emmissions - dont forget all the other by-products (CO, SO2, mercury, lead.. ) and you mine it in a green manner, you would have something resembling a green source of power for a short while - until all the easily minable resources were gone, then renewables become cheaper anyway..
Nuclear? Oh sure its "cheap" - until you have to decommission the sites, and get rid of the waste safely - which has to be looked after for centuries.. Billions of pounds were wasted on Nuclear power generation in the UK to no avail - the money would have been much better spent on researching renewables, which have had a pittance by comparison.
solar = not feasible right now :( (Score:2)
The problem lies is the fact that the most effective dies for sensitizing solar cells are Ruthenium baised. And, unfortunately, there is only enough ruthenium in the world to cover an area the size of North Dakota with solar cells.
While this would be an impressively large array of solar cells, it does not even begin to scratch the surface of
Re:solar = not feasible right now :( (Score:2)
These towers do not use cells - they use convection to generate air-flow through 1km high towers that turns 250MW turbines..
Actually Solar cells will become feasable too as oil pushes >$50/barrel.. You would only need to cover part the deserts of australia with solar to make all the worlds electricity.
Bio is interesting, although figures I have seen require planting most the worlds arable land to make enough fuel for the USA - and then you need to power all the trators that plant/harvest etc..
Re:Ok, first the obvious.. (Score:2)
Re:Ok, first the obvious.. (Score:2)
What happens when the wind stops blowing? (Score:2)
From http://www.bwea.com/ref/stop.html [bwea.com]
What happens when the wind stops blowing?
Much of the following information is taken from an article by
DJ Milborrow in WindDirections Volume XIV, No.3 April 1995.
Wind turbines generate electricity from a fuel that is free and will never run out, but which isn't available all the time. This factor of 'non-firm' or intermittent' generation is often cited as a detriment of wind energy, with a popular question being '
Re:Ok, first the obvious.. (Score:2)
As I said, going Nuclear doesnt solve this problem you still need to tackle the problem of storage/conversion for cars, whether the electricity comes from Wind or Nuclear. The best selling Electric car can run you around town for about 1.3p/mile, compared to 20p/mile
Re:Ok, first the obvious.. (Score:2)
There are individual solar houses that have been built in places like Australia with zero energy bills (net) - but thet are connected to the grid, sometimes they use electricity, sometimes they pump it back to the grid.
It makes sense for new-build properties to incorperate solar into areas like the roof, which would otherwise just be unused..
what i'd like to see (Score:3, Insightful)
Radiation.... (Score:3, Informative)
Anyway, with appropriate scrubbing coal can be greener, but I don't really see it as being an option for the future. Then again, Oil and gas are fossil fuels which have many uses outside of power generation and we should be working to preserve those, so given the shoice between a coal fired station and an Oil/Gas station it's probably a better long term idea to go for the coal. I don't think coal has so many uses in comparison, except maybe as raw materials for Superman cornering the Diamond cartels.
Re:Radiation.... (Score:2)
how about biodiesel? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:how about biodiesel? (Score:3, Funny)
At the cost of being Redundant... (Score:2)
Oh, this I trust (Score:5, Insightful)
Shouldn't their name be 'Americans for Coal Power'?
Never support a group that needs a mask.
Not in this Orwellian world of ours (Score:2)
Hello... (Score:2)
Hmmmm?
Coal is great! (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Coal is great! (Score:4, Insightful)
Welcome to Capitalism... where its all about the shareholder. If they don't make their money, they get mad. Its all about the "near term" problems.
Not Coal Extraction (Score:5, Informative)
Coal mining today is not about underground mines - it is about strip mines and mountain top removal [appvoices.org]. Instead of digging holes underground you blast the top few hundred feet off of a mountain and dig straight down. Of course the blast debris - thousands of tons of it - has to go somewhere. Usually into the neighbouring valley, destroying homes and watersheds.
The Industry says that today's coal burns cleaner. Do they tell you how?
That's because the coal is washed before being trucked to users. Where do you think the solvent laden waste water goes? Into large holding ponds, dozens of which are known to be on the brink of collapsing.
One such pond broke in 2002. The Martin County slurry spill [appalshop.org], at over 300 million gallons, was the largest disaster of its kind ever in the southeastern United States. The spill released nearly 30 times more liquid than the Exxon Valdez.
You also need to factor in the coal company's history of just abandoning mines [tinyurl.com], leaving them for local and state governments to clean up. And the ongoing damage and injuries caused by coal trucks [appalshop.org] hauling grossly overwieght loads - by ten or twenty tons - on narrow highways.
There's more to being clean than measuring smokestack emmisions.
Re:Not Coal Extraction (Score:2)
Coal is a dirty business, but it is getting better and it can be a valuable addition to meeting our energy needs until nuclear or "green aproved" techs like solar/wind are finished.
As for the Martin County spill, that was an
Just between us (Score:3, Insightful)
When farms are being abandoned because farm products are in surplus, destroying a mountain to make another field is waste several times over.
Re:Not Coal Extraction (Score:2)
"Mountaintop removal" also known as "scrape and fill" produces useable land for farming and development in the most economically depressed area in the US.
I offer all due respect to you when I say that you are a liar. Show me a farm on a mountaintop removal site. These are barren, rocky landscapes that can barely grow grass, let alone a productive food crop. Mountaintop removal mining illegally destroys streams and good hardwood forestland. The reclaimed sites may look green from a distance but they ar
Re:Not Coal Extraction (Score:2)
Re:Not Coal Extraction (Score:2)
Fine. Where's the farm?
Re:Not Coal Extraction (Score:2)
Re:Not Coal Extraction (Score:2)
If you can get bermuda grass to grow in the EKY climate at 2500', getting corn or tobacco to grow shouldn't be a problem.
So, no farms then. Just admit it -- you made that crap up. Just like the the valley fills in eastern KY "at 2500'." There might be some at 1000 ft. but I'd call that a pretty high altitude fill for that area.
It's the mark of a truly enlightened person who can alter his beliefs when confronted with evidence that contradicts his closely-held assumptions. Your assumptions obviously are
nuclear? no. Wind, yes. (Score:3, Insightful)
Wind needs STORAGE. (Score:2)
Not until you have solved one of two issues:
If you don't understand the difference between supplying energy and supplying load, your conclusions will be faulty.
Re:nuclear? no. Wind, yes. (Score:2)
Re:nuclear? no. Wind, yes. (Score:2)
Dirty hands... (Score:2)
Assuming that one's hands get dirty when mining coal.
Isn't carbon dioxide less deadly with more trees? (Score:2)
Let grow mosquito's (and a few more trees)!!!
The Irony (Score:4, Insightful)
The ad shows an eagle unable to fly because of smog, and then talks about how much cleaner coal is now and will be in the future, with a sub-title saying that this is because of EPA regulation
The great irony is that the coal industry fought tooth and nail to oppose these very regulations. They never would never be able to make these claims if it weren't for "those damn liberal treehuggers".
The Irony of 'in Part' (Score:2)
Much depends on where the coal comes from (Score:2)
I have nothing against continuing to develop cleaner coal power in principle, but there needs to be a balance. In Ontario, nuclear and hydroelectric provides the baseline power and c
Should we go nuclear? (Score:2)
Re:How about a little education instead? (Score:1)
Re:How about a little education instead? (Score:4, Informative)
Gee, lets skim through some of the headlines at GlobalWarming.org:
Kyoto protocol will cool the global economy
The uberhysteria over climate change
Why the United States should remove its signature from the Kyoto Protocol
The site is a one sided beast. To present it simply as an objective Educational site" is like saying Democrats.org or RNC.com are un-biased sites.
Unbiased? (Score:1, Flamebait)
Re:Unbiased? (Score:3, Informative)
Junk Science (djunk si-ens)
n.:
1. The observation, identification, description, experimental investigation, and theoretical explanation of phenomena which results in a conclusion that contradicts the writer's beliefs.
2. A system of knowledge covering general truths or the operation of general laws especially as obtained and tested through the scientific method and concerned with the physical world and its phenomena, yet persists in presenting facts that the writer dislikes.
Exampl
Re:Unbiased? (Score:1, Troll)
The special agendas are wide and varied, but most of them are pursuing specific financial gains. DuPont, for example, when the patent for freon was about to expire, pushed that fre
Don't be a tool. (Score:2)
It's just that DuPont chose to withhold that knowledge until such time that it was profitable for them.
Similarly, most REAL climatologists agree that we are fucking up our climate system. There is no secret cabal of companies who stand to profit from this knowledge. I knew this stuff when I was in first grade, published in books about the fucking Solar System (specifically comparing Venus's fate to Earth if our trends did not reverse)... w
Re:You are proving my point here..... (Score:3, Informative)
This research was put forward by Yang Xuexiang, a professor of geological sciences at Changchun University of Technology in China. His research showed that the ozone layer was affected by certain energetic particles striking the earth's atmosphere and breaking up the ozone layer.
(Why is it that when someone publishes something you don't like, it's "junk science", but when you like the result he's "showed" it? (As opposed to "suggesting"?)
Is this" the guy? If so, do you know anything about ozone or a
Uphill battle? (Score:2)
His date does track and correlate. The only reason he has an uphill battle is be
Re:Uphill battle? (Score:2)
Oxygen is heavier than air, too. Yet it's abundant all through the atmosphere. Turbulent mixing is an amazing thing. You don't get a lot of segregation until you get higher up in the atmosphere. And I already told you why you see it mainly in Antarctica as has another poster.
When Antarctica is tilted away from the Sun, there's no UV to destroy O3, either. So you wouldn't expect a hole. Even if *you* do, then you had better explain why the north pole does
Re:Uphill battle? (Score:2)
CFCs are much, much heavier. Freon-12 (CCl2F2), as an example, is not even in the same ballpark as the rest of the eleme
Re:You are proving my point here..... (Score:2)
Look, it's very simple. CFCs are not water soluable. So they diffuse evenly through the atmosphere. Once they hit the poles, the increased abundance of nitric (or sulphiric?) acids present in the atmosphere at those temperatures causes the CFCs to break down. The free chlorine has an immediate effect on nearby ozone molecules. Hence the effect is most prevelant in the upper stratosphere near the poles. In
Re:You are proving my point here..... (Score:2)
The nitrates in the stratosphere actually *inhibit* the effects of liberated chlorine, by tying it up in chlorine nitrate, which is not reactive with ozone. What happened in the polar regions is that the nitrates get removed on ic
Re:You are proving my point here..... (Score:2)
Re:Unbiased? (Score:2)
By that definition, virtually all science is junk science. Special agendas have a range. Maybe there are rogue "watermelon" professors who secretly desire to crush capitalist industrialism. Maybe a lot of professors want to get tenure. Without any hard data to support it, I'd propose a theory suggessting that the latter agenda overwhelmingly dominates the former.
So if we agree that the science is all
Modded Troll by a Coward. Read if you dare. (Score:2)
The only place there is a hole in the ozone is over Antarctica, an area wholly without man made CFCs. Yet there are not holes in the ozone layer over any other continent on the planet. Why so? Well, you have to have enough science education to understand how ozone is formed, something you are obviously missing.
In a very simplified manner, it works this way: Incoming ultraviolet radiation
Re:Unbiased? (Score:3, Insightful)
You want a little education? I'll balance it. (Score:3, Informative)
On a similar note (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Basic chemistry defeats FUD (Score:3, Informative)
It's not practical yet, but the theory is there.
Re:Basic chemistry defeats FUD (Score:2)
You should see the size of plaster waste mountains currently produced by power plants because of required sulfur dioxide removal from emissions. (The shitiest brown coal has maybe 1% of sulfur) The sulfur dioxide removal process uses a lot of limestone powder which makes the people living near the plants and limestone quaries not happy - dust, transpotration noise, etc. And the whole damned thing is not only dirty but also quite expensive to run.
Now you would want to sequest CO2 as wel
You don't LIKE getting plastered? (Score:2)
Re:Basic chemistry defeats FUD (Score:2)
The volumes involved are certainly large, but they are small on a global scale, and the problem of disposing of these piles is small compared to the potential problems produced by uncontrolled buildup of atmospheric CO2. After all, all the substances in the waste stream are solids, and are already present in very large quantities in the crust.
Re:They're ignoring the most important part... (Score:3, Insightful)
You must be talking about the regulated utilities. What you fail to understand is that, based on legislation passed, the regulated utilities were forced to sell off generation in order to create an energy market. In addition, the utilities were barred from entering into long term contracts. In addition, the utilities were forced (for a long time) to accept Cogeneration contracts, which far exceed the costs of conventio