This will be the first new project for Hydrogen Energy, the new company launched by BP and Rio Tinto last week, subject to regulatory approval.
The planned project would be an industrial-scale coal-fired power and carbon capture and storage project. It would generate enough electricity to meet 15 per cent of the demand of south west Western Australia, while each year capturing and permanently storing about four million tonnes of carbon dioxide which otherwise would have been emitted to the atmosphere.
The project would gasify locally-produced coal from the Collie region to produce hydrogen and carbon dioxide. The hydrogen would be used to fuel the power station and around 90 per cent of the carbon dioxide would be captured and stored permanently in a deep underground geological formation.
The costs of this low-carbon hydrogen-fuelled power generation are higher than those of traditional power generation. For the project to be economic and able to compete effectively in the electricity market, it would require appropriate policy support and a regulatory environment which recognises and encourages the low-carbon benefits it can deliver.
Subject to the successful outcome of detailed engineering and commercial studies, and providing government policy is in place to make the project commercially viable, a final investment decision to develop the project could be made in 2011, with the project coming into operation after a three year construction period.
Speaking at today’s announcement in
“This has enormous potential to affect the way that coal will be used for power generation across the world. Clean coal technology such as this will be essential to reducing greenhouse gas emissions, both in
The project’s gasification facility and power station would be located in Kwinana, 45km south of
Kwinana is an ideal location for a project of this type. The availability of a suitable site immediately adjacent to BP’s refinery, Rio Tinto’s Hismelt plant and other industrial operations which may benefit from its output provides synergies and potential additional revenue streams that greatly assist the commercial viability of the project. Increasing power demand combined with growth in the
Rio Tinto is a leading international mining group headquartered in the
BP is one of the world’s largest oil and gas companies with operations in more than 100 countries across six continents. The company’s main businesses are exploration and production of oil and gas; refining, manufacturing and marketing of oil products and petrochemicals; transportation and marketing of natural gas; and a growing business in renewable and low-carbon power, BP Alternative Energy. BP’s low carbon interests combined in BP Alternative Energy include: BP Solar; the company’s fast growing interests in wind power; gas-fired power generation; and BP’s interest in Hydrogen Energy.
PIN/BP.COM
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