US, China,
India's 850 New
Coal Plants To Bury Kyoto
The Christian Science Monitor
12-26-4
The 850 new coal plants
planned by the US, China and India will generate 5 times more
emissions than the Kyoto Protocol would cut...
So much for Kyoto.
The official treaty to
curb greenhouse-gas emissions hasn't gone into effect yet and
already three countries are planning to build nearly 850 new
coal-fired plants, which would pump up to five times as much carbon
dioxide into the atmosphere as the Kyoto Protocol aims to reduce.
The magnitude of that
imbalance is staggering. Environmentalists have long called the
treaty a symbolic rather than practical victory in the fight against
global warming. But even many of them do not appear aware of the
coming tidal wave of greenhouse-gas emissions by nations not under
Kyoto restrictions.
By 2012, the plants in
three key countries - China, India, and the United States - are
expected to emit as much as an extra 2.7 billion tons of carbon
dioxide, according to a Monitor analysis of power-plant construction
data. In contrast, Kyoto countries by that year are supposed to have
cut their CO2 emissions by some 483 million tons.
The findings suggest
that critics of the treaty, including the Bush administration, may
be correct when they claim the treaty is hopelessly flawed because
it doesn't limit emissions from the developing world. But they also
suggest that the world is on the cusp of creating a huge new
infrastructure that will pump out enormous amounts of CO2 for the
next six decades.
Without strong US
leadership, it's unlikely that technology to cut CO2 emissions will
be ready in time for the power-plant construction boom, many say.
"If all those power
plants are online by 2012, then obviously it completely cancels out
any gains from Kyoto," says Gavin Schmidt, a climate modeler with
the Goddard Institute for Space Studies, part of the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration.
The reason for the
dramatic imbalance is coal. Just a few years ago, economists and
environmentalists still pictured a world shifting steadily from
"dirty" coal-fired power plants to "cleaner" natural-gas turbines.
But the fast-rising price of natural gas and other factors abruptly
changed that picture. Now the world is facing a tidal wave of new
power plants fired by coal, experts say. "China and India are
building coal-fired capacity as fast as they can," says Christopher
Bergesen, who tracks power plant construction for Platts, the energy
publishing division of McGraw- Hill.
China is the dominant
player. The country is on track to add 562 coal-fired plants -
nearly half the world total of plants expected to come online in the
next eight years. India could add 213such plants; the US, 72. (See
chart below.)
Altogether, those three
nations are set to add up to 327,000 megawatts by 2012 - three
quarters of the new capacity in the global pipeline and roughly
equal to the output of today's US coal-fired generating fleet.
The new coal plants
from the three nations would burn about 900 million extra tons of
coal each year. That, in turn, would emit in the neighborhood of 2.5
billion tons of CO2 into the atmosphere, Dr. Schmidt estimates.
"I'm not hugely
optimistic we are going to slow the rate of carbon emission overall
any time soon," says Schmidt of the Goddard institute. "If this sort
of thing continues unchecked, we won't be arguing about climate
change in 2100, because the changes will be all too obvious."
But several
uncertainties remain. First, not all of the plants may be built.
In the US, for example,
local opposition may halt construction of some of the 100 coal-fired
plants now in various stages of development. According to Mr.
Bergesen's numbers, 72 plants could be added, the basis for the
Monitor's estimates.
Another uncertainty:
Slightly less than half of the new plants Platts forecasts for China
and India have an official start date. If only those plants with
start dates are built, then the expected emissions from the three
nations would total only 1.2 billion tons of CO2, still more than
double the required reduction from Kyoto. But that estimate is
conservative, experts say, because Chinese and Indian leaders face
few political barriers to power-plant construction and big demands
for more power.
Efficiency A Key
Although US coal-fired
plants are far more efficient than those in China or India, all
three countries, presumably, would install state-of-the-art
technology. The Monitor's estimates are based on the assumption that
the new plants in all three nations will be 10 percent more
efficient than today's US average - a conservative estimate, experts
say.
The third uncertainty
involves new technology. Having rejected Kyoto, President Bush says
the US will pursue its own policy of voluntary carbon reductions and
conduct research into technologies like "carbon sequestration" -
burying CO2 rather than emitting it. To do that, the US Department
of Energy hopes to develop new technologies by 2012 that would
economically capture the greenhouse gas before it leaves the power
plant.
One approach - called
Integrated Gasification Combined Cycle (IGCC) technology - aims to
siphon off CO2 before it's sent up the stack. The largest US power
company, American Electric Power in Columbus, Ohio, plans to build
at least one commercial IGCC plant by 2010. Another coal-burning
power company, Cinergy, in Cincinnati, this month said it also would
build an IGCC plant.
But funding for a key
billion-dollar federal IGCC experimental program called FutureGen is
lagging. And unless the US sets a limit on CO2 emissions that
creates a market for carbon-reducing technology, there is little
financial incentive to invest in such technology, experts say. As a
result, the technology appears unlikely to be deployed in time to
make much difference in the coming surge of power-plant
construction.
Without such
technology, the impact on climate by the new coal plants would be
significant, though not entirely unanticipated. They would boost CO2
emissions from fossil fuels by about 14 percent by 2012, Schmidt
estimates.
That's within the 1 to
2 percent annual range for CO2 growth expected in "high-growth"
scenarios put forward by climate scientists. But it does not fall
into the "maximum" scenario they use to evaluate the worst-case
impact of greenhouse gases.
The Power Of Six
"The point is that a
relatively small number of countries holds the fate of the planet in
their hands in terms of climate change," says David Hawkins,
director of the Natural Resources Defense Council's climate center.
"If the five or six countries building all these power plants were
to come together to develop a strategy for carbon capture applied to
coal, it would be a huge step toward cutting global warming."
Energy security is one
factor driving the shift. With its 250-year supply of coal, the US
is often called the "Saudi Arabia of coal." China, with similarly
huge reserves, is even planning to convert coal into synthetic fuel
for cars - even though such processes typically produce large
amounts of greenhouse gases.
Coal's low price has
been a powerful incentive, too. Chinese authorities are pushing for
cleaner power. But gas pipelines in China aren't fully utilized
because of that fuel's higher cost, experts say. And in the US,
utility companies are shifting focus from natural gas to coal
instead.
"There has been an
abrupt about-face," says Robert McIlvaine, who heads his own
Northfield, Ill., information company that tracks the construction
of coal power plants globally. "Utilities that would not consider a
coal-fired plant a year or two ago are now moving forward with
coal-fired projects."
With natural gas prices
expected to continue rising, 58 other nations have 340 new
coal-fired plants in various stages of development. They are
expected to go online in a decade or so. Malaysia, Japan, Indonesia,
Thailand, and Turkey are all planning significant new coal-fired
power additions. Germany also plans to build eight coal plants with
6,000 megawatts capacity.
But China is the key.
"The Chinese will surpass the coal-fired generating capacity and the
CO2 emissions of the US in the next couple of years," Mr. McIlvaine
says.
Hit by blackouts and
power restrictions for 18 months, China has been scrambling to
relieve that pressure. Scores of unauthorized power projects about
which little is known have sprouted nationwide - along with hundreds
of official projects, McIlvaine says. Because of this, even careful
estimates could be low, both he and Bergesen say.
"Environmental
optimists were assuming the world was going to switch to gas, but
when you're short of gas you use your own coal," says Philip
Andrews-Speed, a China energy expert at the University of Dundee, in
Scotland. "What you're seeing with China and the others is the
cheapness and security of coal just overwhelming the desire to be
clean."
Copyright © 2004 The Christian Science Monitor. All rights reserved.