e360 digest
14 Aug 2008:
CO2 Sequestration Increases Emissions of Other Pollutants, Study Says
Sequestering carbon dioxide from power plants may actually
increase the pollutants released into the atmosphere, a study in the
Journal of Greenhouse Gas Control reports. Compressing the gas for storage, transporting it to a reservoir, and pumping it deep underground all require energy, causing a coal-fired power plant that sequesters its CO
2 to burn 30 percent more coal than a non-sequestering plant, the study concluded. While these plants' CO
2 emissions are 71 percent to 78 percent lower, they produce 40 percent more nitrogen oxides and sulfur oxides. These chemicals cause acid rain, water pollution, and destruction of the ozone layer, leading scientists to question the environmental benefits of sequestering CO
2 underground, a process that is
being promoted by the coal industry and some environmentalists.