The health and climate impacts of carbon capture and direct air capture

被引:69
|
作者
Jacobson, Mark Z. [1 ]
机构
[1] Stanford Univ, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Stanford, CA 94305 USA
关键词
139; COUNTRIES; GAS; EMISSIONS; WATER; WIND; CO2;
D O I
10.1039/c9ee02709b
中图分类号
O6 [化学];
学科分类号
0703 ;
摘要
Data from a coal with carbon capture and use (CCU) plant and a synthetic direct air carbon capture and use (SDACCU) plant are analyzed for the equipment's ability, alone, to reduce CO2. In both plants, natural gas turbines power the equipment. A net of only 10.8% of the CCU plant's CO2-equivalent (CO(2)e) emissions and 10.5% of the CO2 removed from the air by the SDACCU plant are captured over 20 years, and only 20-31%, are captured over 100 years. The low net capture rates are due to uncaptured combustion emissions from natural gas used to power the equipment, uncaptured upstream emissions, and, in the case of CCU, uncaptured coal combustion emissions. Moreover, the CCU and SDACCU plants both increase air pollution and total social costs relative to no capture. Using wind to power the equipment reduces CO(2)e relative to using natural gas but still allows air pollution emissions to continue and increases the total social cost relative to no carbon capture. Conversely, using wind to displace coal without capturing carbon reduces CO(2)e, air pollution, and total social cost substantially. In sum, CCU and SDACCU increase or hold constant air pollution health damage and reduce little carbon before even considering sequestration or use leakages of carbon back to the air. Spending on capture rather than wind replacing either fossil fuels or bioenergy always increases total social cost substantially. No improvement in CCU or SDACCU equipment can change this conclusion while fossil fuel emissions exist, since carbon capture always incurs an equipment cost never incurred by wind, and carbon capture never reduces, instead mostly increases, air pollution and fuel mining, which wind eliminates. Once fossil fuel emissions end, CCU (for industry) and SDACCU social costs need to be evaluated against the social costs of natural reforestation and reducing nonenergy halogen, nitrous oxide, methane, and biomass burning emissions.
引用
收藏
页码:3567 / 3574
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Postcombustion Capture or Direct Air Capture in Decarbonizing US Natural Gas Power?
    Azarabadi, Habib
    Lackner, Klaus S.
    [J]. ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, 2020, 54 (08) : 5102 - 5111
  • [42] ENERGY STORAGE AND DIRECT AIR CARBON CAPTURE SOLUTION FOR OFFSHORE SOURCES OF ENERGY
    Hands, Graydon
    Truong, Kevin
    Unico, Yvan
    Ashar, Areeb
    Al-Saiedy, Ali
    Shor, Roman J.
    [J]. PROCEEDINGS OF ASME 2023 42ND INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON OCEAN, OFFSHORE & ARCTIC ENGINEERING, OMAE2023, VOL 8, 2023,
  • [43] Verification Method of Direct Air Capture by Cementitious Material Using Carbon Isotopes
    Wang, Zhenzhen
    Aili, Abudushalamu
    Minami, Masayo
    Maruyama, Ippei
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ADVANCED CONCRETE TECHNOLOGY, 2023, 21 (11) : 934 - 940
  • [44] ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING Direct-Air Carbon Dioxide Capture Systems Launched
    Cardno, Catherine A.
    [J]. CIVIL ENGINEERING, 2018, 88 (07): : 26 - 28
  • [45] Acid-base concentration swing for direct air capture of carbon dioxide
    Rinberg, Anatoly
    Aziz, Michael J.
    [J]. ENERGY ADVANCES, 2024, 3 (09): : 2295 - 2310
  • [46] Toward the feasible direct air capture of carbon dioxide with molecular sieves water
    Fu, Donglong
    Davis, Mark E.
    [J]. CELL REPORTS PHYSICAL SCIENCE, 2023, 4 (05):
  • [47] Direct Air Carbon Capture Takes Baby Steps——Giant Strides Are Needed
    Sean O’Neill
    [J]. Engineering, 2022, (01) : 3 - 5
  • [48] Direct Air Carbon Capture Takes Baby Steps——Giant Strides Are Needed
    Sean O'Neill
    [J]. Engineering., 2022, 8 (01) - 5
  • [49] Membrane Processes for Direct Carbon Dioxide Capture From Air: Possibilities and Limitations
    Castel, Christophe
    Bounaceur, Roda
    Favre, Eric
    [J]. FRONTIERS IN CHEMICAL ENGINEERING, 2021, 3
  • [50] Direct air capture of CO2 and climate stabilization: A model based assessment
    Chen, Chen
    Tavoni, Massimo
    [J]. CLIMATIC CHANGE, 2013, 118 (01) : 59 - 72