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FutureGen

FutureGen was a project to demonstrate capture and sequestration of waste carbon dioxide from a coal-fired electrical generating station. The project (renamed FutureGen 2.0) was retrofitting a shuttered coal-fired power plant in Meredosia, Illinois, with oxy-combustion generators. The waste CO2 would be piped approximately 30 miles (48 km) to be sequestered in underground saline formations. FutureGen was a partnership between the United States government and an alliance of primarily coal-related corporations. Costs were estimated at US$1.65 billion, with $1.0 billion provided by the Federal Government.[1][2][3]

Meredosia Power Station
DOE FutureGen concept art c.2007
Official nameFutureGen 2.0
CountryUnited States
LocationMorgan County, Illinois
Coordinates39°49′23″N 90°33′58″W / 39.82306°N 90.56611°W / 39.82306; -90.56611
StatusCancelled
Owner(s)FutureGen Industrial Alliance, Inc
Thermal power station
Primary fuelCoal
Power generation
Nameplate capacity229 MW

First announced by President George W. Bush in 2003, construction started in 2014 after restructuring, canceling, relocating, and restarting.[1][4] Citing an inability to commit and spend the funds by deadlines in 2015, the Department of Energy withdrew funds and suspended FutureGen 2.0 in February, 2015. The government also cited the Alliance's inability to raise the requisite amount of private funding.[5] The Meredosia power plant that had been planned for retrofit was demolished around 2021.[6]

FutureGen 2.0 would have been the most comprehensive Department of Energy Carbon Capture and Storage demonstration project, involving all phases from combustion to sequestration.[4] FutureGen's initial plan involved integrated gasification combined cycle technology to produce both electricity and hydrogen. Early in the project it was to be sited in Mattoon, IL.[4]

Original project edit

The original incarnation of FutureGen was as a public-private partnership to build the world's first near zero-emissions coal-fueled power plant. The 275-megawatt plant would be intended to prove the feasibility of producing electricity and hydrogen from coal while capturing and permanently storing carbon dioxide underground. The Alliance intended to build the plant in Mattoon Township, Coles County, Illinois northwest of Mattoon, Illinois, subject to necessary approvals (issuing a “Record of Decision”) by the Department of Energy (DOE) as part of the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) process.[7]

FutureGen was to be designed, developed and operated by the FutureGen Industrial Alliance, a non-profit consortium of coal mining and electric utility companies formed to partner with the DOE on the FutureGen project. The project was still in the development stage when its funding was cancelled in January 2008. The Alliance decision of the location of the host site, subject to DOE's completing NEPA environmental reviews, was announced in December 2007 after a two-year bidding and review process. Construction was scheduled to begin in 2009, with full-scale plant operations to begin in 2012.[8]

The estimated gross project cost, including construction and operations, and excluding offsetting revenue, was $1.65 billion.[9] The project was governed by a legally binding cooperative agreement between DOE and the Alliance.[10] Under the agreement, DOE was to provide 74% of the project’s cost, with private industry contributing the other 26%. The DOE also planned to solicit the financial support and participation of international governments in the FutureGen project, since by 2020 more than 60% of man-made greenhouse gas emissions are expected to come from developing countries. Foreign financial support was to offset a portion of DOE’s cost-share. As of January 2008, the foreign governments of China, India, Australia, South Korea, and Japan had expressed interest in participating and sharing the cost of the project.[11]

FutureGen was to sequester carbon dioxide emissions at a rate of one million metric tons per year for four years, which is the scale a Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) report cites as appropriate for proving sequestration. The MIT report also states that “the priority objective with respect to coal should be the successful large-scale demonstration of the technical, economic, and environmental performance of the technologies that make up all of the major components of a large-scale integrated CCS system — capture, transportation and storage.”[12] An injection field test similar to this was done in Norway.[13][14]

In March 2009 Washington Post reported that U.S. Secretary of Energy Steven Chu expressed support for continuing the project using stimulus funds (after some changes that have not yet been specified) and making it a part of a larger portfolio of research plants developed in collaboration with other countries.[15]

Following the successful completion of the first phase, in February 2013, the Energy Department announced the beginning of Phase II of the project development with a new cooperative agreement between the FutureGen Industrial Alliance and the Department of Energy. This means that the FutureGen project has government support as it moves into its third phase, deployment of the project.[9]

Site selection edit

Site selection for the FutureGen facility was based on a competitive process which began in May 2006. Seven states responded[16] to the Site Request for Proposals with a total of 12 proposals. Proposals were reviewed against a set of environmental, technical, regulatory, and financial criteria with input from external technical advisors on power plant design and carbon sequestration. In July 2006, four candidate sites were selected for further review, including an environmental impact analysis as required by NEPA.

DOE issued its Final Environmental impact statement (EIS) on November 8, 2007, which concluded that all four sites were acceptable from an environmental impact standpoint and all would move forward in the site evaluation process. EPA published a Notice of Availability (NOA) for the EIS in the Federal Register on November 16, 2007.[17] The DOE is required by federal law to wait at least 30 days after the NOA release before issuing its final Record of Decision (ROD). The waiting period legally closed on December 17, 2007. DOE chose not to issue the ROD and advised the FutureGen Alliance to delay the final site selection announcement, which was scheduled to occur at the end of the 30-day waiting period. The Alliance chose to move ahead with the announcement, citing time, money, and a commitment to proposers to select the final site by year-end. "Every month of delay can add $10 million to the project's cost, solely due to inflation," said Michael Mudd, the Alliance's chief executive.

The FutureGen Alliance announced the selection of Mattoon, Illinois as the host site on December 18, 2007.[18][19] According to the EIS, Mattoon, IL the site is located about 3.5 miles (5.6 km) northwest of downtown Mattoon in the eastern part of Mattoon township section 8 on 1.8 km2 (440 acres) of former farm land. The carbon sequestration area is about 8,000 feet (2.4 km) below the ground.[20] In July 2007, Illinois Public Act 095-0018 became law giving the state of Illinois ownership of and liability for the sequestered gases.[21]

Technology edit

Original FutureGen project was intended to combine and test several new technologies in a single location, including coal gasification, emissions controls, hydrogen production, electricity generation, and carbon dioxide capture and storage (CCS).[22]

Integrated Gasification Combined Cycle (IGCC) was the core technology behind FutureGen. IGCC power plants use two turbines – a gas and a steam turbine – to produce electric power more efficiently than pulverized coal plants. IGCC plants also make it easier to capture carbon dioxide for carbon sequestration.[23]

FutureGen was to capture carbon dioxide produced during the gasification process and pump it into deep rock formations thousands of feet under ground. FutureGen specifically targeted rock formations containing saline water, as these are one of the most abundant types of geologic formations that can be used to store carbon dioxide worldwide.[24] A study by the Global Energy Technology Strategy Program estimates the storage capacity of these saline rock formations in the U.S. to be 2,970 gigatons of carbon dioxide, compared to a capacity of 77 gigatons of carbon dioxide for all other types of reservoirs, such as depleted gas fields.[25] Focusing on rock formations with saline water was intended to help ensure that the lessons learned from the project are broadly transferable throughout the U.S. and around the world.

Challenges edit

Maintaining the project schedule and keeping costs down were two major challenges with which the DOE and the FutureGen Alliance grappled. The project had remained on schedule with the announcement of the host site before the end of 2007; however, a desire by DOE to restructure the project’s financial arrangement has brought the project to a halt.

In December 2007, the DOE Acting Deputy Assistant Secretary for Fossil Energy James Slutz stated that projected cost overruns for the project "require a reassessment of FutureGen's design." And that "This will require restructuring FutureGen to maximize the role of private-sector innovation, facilitate the most productive public-private partnership, and prevent further cost escalation."[26]

The FutureGen Alliance wrote a letter to the Department of Energy’s Under Secretary C.H. “Bud” Albright Jr. stating that overall inflation and the rising cost of raw materials and engineering services are driving costs up on energy projects around the world. According to James L. Connaughton, chairman of the White House Council on Environmental Quality, the market for steel, concrete and power plant components has “just gone through the roof globally”, and much of the reason is the construction of hundreds of new conventional coal plants.[27]

On January 11, 2008, the FutureGen Alliance sent a letter to the DOE offering to lower the government's portion of the project's costs. The initial plans had called for DOE to pay based on a percentage of the total cost, and their portion had risen from about $620 million to about $1.33 billion. The letter indicated that DOE's portion would now be $800 million.[28]

Risk management was a significant portion of the cost of the first FutureGen experimental implementation.[29] FutureGen involved many complex never-before-solved technology problems. The risks also included significant health risks, if the untested-technology systems failed to work correctly.

Funding cancellation edit

On January 29, 2008, the U.S. Department of Energy announced that it would pull its funding for the project, mostly due to higher than expected costs. The move is likely to delay the project as other members seek the additional funds that the DOE was to provide. The sudden concern over cost after an Illinois site was chosen over those in Texas raised questions about the motives for the cancellation. Local and state officials in Illinois, including then Governor Rod Blagojevich, expressed frustration at the move, especially in light of the money and resources that the state had spent to attract the project. Democratic Senator Dick Durbin of Illinois accused Energy Secretary Samuel Bodman of "cruel deception" of Illinoisans by "creating false hope in a FutureGen project which he has no intention of funding or supporting."[30] Durbin claimed that "when the city of Mattoon, Illinois, was chosen over possible locations in Texas, the secretary of energy set out to kill FutureGen."[31] Mattoon mayor David Cline said "one could question the motivation of the Department of Energy which was ready to move forward with the project until a site other than Texas was chosen."[31]

In March 2009, Congressional auditors determined that the DOE had miscalculated the government portion of the project's cost, overstating the amount by a half billion dollars. As a result, the Bush administration cited the project as having nearly doubled in cost when, in reality, it had increased by 39%[32]

Secretary Bodman stated that with restructuring the FutureGen project, DOE plans "to equip multiple new clean-coal power plants with advanced CCS technology, instead of one demonstration plant. That will provide more electricity from multiple clean-coal plants, sequestering at least twice as much CO2 and providing for wider use and more rapid commercialization."[33]

Revised plan FutureGen 2.0 edit

Plans for continuing FutureGen edit

Despite the cancellation of funding by the DOE, the FutureGen Alliance continued to move forward with the project, opening an office in Mattoon and planning to buy the land for the plant in August 2008, in partnership with a local group.[34][35]

During the 2008 U.S. presidential campaigns, Sen. Barack Obama pledged his support to clean coal technologies, with plans to develop five commercial-scale coal plants equipped with CCS technology.[36]

In November 2008, Fred Palmer, senior vice president at Peabody Energy shared his outlook on FutureGen with the American Coalition for Clean Coal Electricity (ACCCE), saying that the FutureGen Alliance would "Make a concerted effort in the Obama administration to reinstate the project and get this built as originally planned."[37]

On June 12, 2009, the DOE announced a restart of design work for the FutureGen project.[38] "Following the completion of the detailed cost estimate and fundraising activities," the press release states, "the Department of Energy and the FutureGen Alliance will make a decision either to move forward or to discontinue the project early in 2010."

Revised project: FutureGen 2.0 edit

On August 5, 2010, the DOE announced a retooling of the FutureGen project, dubbed FutureGen 2.0.[39] The revised plan includes retrofitting a shuttered coal-fired power plant in Meredosia, Illinois to demonstrate advanced oxy-combustion technology, and piping the carbon dioxide 175 miles to Mattoon for underground storage. Due to these changes, leaders in Mattoon decided to drop out of the FutureGen project.[40]

The Illinois sites vying for the underground storage portion of the project were in Christian, Douglas, Fayette, and Morgan counties, after sites in Adams and Pike counties were cut in December 2010.[41] In February 2011, Morgan County was chosen for the sequestration site.

In Sept, 2014 FutureGen received the first-ever EPA permits for four class VI carbon dioxide sequestration wells in Morgan County, with plans to store 1.1 million metric tons per year for 20 years.[42][43] Also in 2014 FutureGen survived a lawsuit from Illinois Electric utility ComEd, which challenged the state's ability to impose a surcharge on all customers to pay for FutureGen electricity.[44]

According to critics, including the Illinois Policy Institute, the plan presents major environmental and fiscal pitfalls.[45][46]

FutureGen 2.0 funding cancellation edit

The Department of Energy ordered suspension of FutureGen 2.0 in February, 2015. The funds, appropriated by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, needed to be committed by July 1 and spent by Sept 30, 2015. The government also cited the Alliance's inability to raise the requisite amount of private funding. Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz explained at a press conference “If you look between now and July 1, without them having closed their financing, and try as we might, we just don’t see how it gets over the finish line.” At the time of suspension the power plant part of the project had spent $116.5 million and the sequestration part had spent $86 million.[5]

Alliance members edit

The FutureGen Industrial Alliance is a consortium of 10 power producers and electric utilities from around the globe.[47]

Company Headquarters
Anglo American London, England
BHP Billiton Energy Coal Melbourne, Australia
China Huaneng Group Beijing, China
Consol Energy Pittsburgh, United States
E.ON Louisville, United States
Foundation Coal Linthicum Heights, United States
Peabody Energy St Louis, United States
Rio Tinto Gillette, United States
Xstrata Sydney, Australia

Former members edit

Four companies initially a part of the FutureGen Industrial Alliance have since dropped out of the project.

Company Headquarters
American Electric Power[48] Columbus, United States
Luminant[49] Dallas, United States
PPL Energy Services Group[49] Allentown, United States
Southern Company[48] Atlanta, United States

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Talbot, David (15 September 2014). "Construction Begins at a Carbon-Capture Plant, but Will It Ever Be Completed?". MIT Technology Review.
  2. ^ "FutureGen Fact Sheet: Carbon Dioxide Capture and Storage Project". MIT Carbon Capture and Sequestration Technologies Program. Retrieved 25 October 2014.
  3. ^ . FutureGen Alliance. Archived from the original on 2 November 2014. Retrieved 25 October 2014.
  4. ^ a b c Folger, Peter (10 Feb 2014). The FutureGen Carbon Capture and Sequestration Project: A Brief History and Issues for Congress (PDF) (Report). Congressional Research Service. Retrieved 21 July 2014.
  5. ^ a b Natter, Ari (4 February 2015). . Energy and Climate Report. Bloomberg BNA. Archived from the original on 12 February 2015. Retrieved 10 February 2015.
  6. ^ McDaniel-Ogletree, Samantha (26 July 2021). "Piece by piece, landmark Meredosia smokestacks fading". Jacksonville Journal-Courier. Retrieved 27 May 2023.
  7. ^ . www.rsinc.com. Archived from the original on February 2, 2008.
  8. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-02-16. Retrieved 2008-02-02.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  9. ^ a b "Carbon Capture and Sequestration Technologies @ MIT".
  10. ^ DOE Cooperative Agreement # DE-FC26-06NT42073: FutureGen - A Sequestration and Hydrogen Research Initiative
  11. ^ . www.rsinc.com. Archived from the original on May 13, 2008.
  12. ^ The Future of Coal, http://web.mit.edu/coal/The_Future_of_Coal.pdf
  13. ^ Sleipner—A Carbon Dioxide Capture-and-Storage Project 2006-11-01 at the Wayback Machine.
  14. ^ .
  15. ^ Kindy, Kimberly (2009-03-06). "New Life for 'Clean Coal' Project". Washington Post.
  16. ^ Benman, Keith (2004-03-10). "FutureGen not in near future for Indiana". The Times. Munster, IN. Retrieved 2007-12-18. (Bids by states to host FutureGen)
  17. ^ Federal Register, Vol. 72, No. 221 2008-02-16 at the Wayback Machine
  18. ^ . The News-Gazette (Champaign-Urbana). 2007-12-18. Archived from the original on December 5, 2008. Retrieved 2007-12-18.
  19. ^ . Crain's Chicago Business. 2007-12-18. Archived from the original on 2007-12-23. Retrieved 2007-12-18.
  20. ^ FutureGen Alliance. Environmental Information Volumes for Mattoon, Illinois 2008-02-16 at the Wayback Machine. (PDF) 12.1 MB. December 1, 2006.
  21. ^ "Illinois General Assembly - Full Text of Public Act 095-0018". www.ilga.gov.
  22. ^ . Archived from the original on 2008-01-01. Retrieved 2008-01-04. FutureGen Technology Overview
  23. ^ . Archived from the original on 2008-01-13. Retrieved 2008-01-21. Coal Gassification
  24. ^ . Archived from the original on 2008-01-12. Retrieved 2008-01-21. Carbon Sequestration
  25. ^ “Carbon Dioxide Capture and Geologic Storage: A Core Element of A Global Energy Technology Strategy To Address Climate Change, p. 26. (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-02-16. Retrieved 2008-02-02.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  26. ^ Fowler, Tom (2007-12-18). "Illinois wins coal project, and along with it a tussle / Official warned against announcing winning town in $1.8 billion project". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved 2008-01-31.
  27. ^ Wald, Matthew L. (2007-12-18). "New Type of Coal Plant Moves Ahead, Haltingly". The New York Times. Retrieved 2009-03-10.
  28. ^ Mitchell, Tim (2008-01-30). "No future for FutureGen?". Champaign News-Gazette. Retrieved 2008-01-31.
  29. ^ Final Risk Assessment Report for the FutureGen Project Environmental Impact Statement 2008-02-16 at the Wayback Machine, U.S. Department of Energy, October 2, 2007
  30. ^ "U.S. lawmakers: Energy Department pulls support for FutureGen". Daily Herald. Associated Press. 2008-01-29. Retrieved 2009-03-10.
  31. ^ a b Secter, Bob (2008-01-30). "Energy Department backing out of Illinois-bound FutureGen project, officials say". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 2008-02-02.[permanent dead link]
  32. ^ Wald, Matthew (2009-03-10). "Energy Dept. Said to Err on Coal Project". New York Times. Retrieved 2009-12-12.
  33. ^ Bodman, Samuel W. (2008-02-06). . St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Archived from the original on 2008-02-10. Retrieved 2008-02-11.
  34. ^ Stroud, Rob (2008-04-19). "FutureGen sounds upbeat note, Supporters lobbying presidential candidates". Decatur Herald & Review. Retrieved 2008-04-22.
  35. ^ Thilmony, Meg (2008-04-19). "Alliance, local group buying land for FutureGen plant". Champaign News-Gazette.
  36. ^ Barack Obama and Joe Biden: New Energy for America (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-10-17. Retrieved 2008-11-05.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) BarackObama.com. Retrieved November 25, 2008.
  37. ^ Lucas, Joe (2008-11-21). . Behind the Plug (blog). AmericasPower.org. Archived from the original on 16 September 2014. Retrieved 23 October 2014.
  38. ^ "Secretary Chu Announces Agreement on FutureGen Project in Mattoon, IL" (Press release). US Dept. of Energy. June 12, 2009.
  39. ^ "Secretary Chu Announces FutureGen 2.0" (Press release). US Dept. of Energy. August 5, 2010.
  40. ^ Kacich, Tom (2010-08-11). "Coles County says 'no' to FutureGen". Champaign News-Gazette. Retrieved 2010-08-12.
  41. ^ "FutureGen narrows potential carbon sites to 4". Associated Press. 2010-12-20. Retrieved 2011-02-15.
  42. ^ "EPA approves FutureGen plan for carbon dioxide storage". St. Louis Post Dispatch. Associated Press. 2014-09-02. Retrieved 23 October 2014.
  43. ^ "FutureGen Alliance 2.0 Permit Application". U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Retrieved 23 October 2014.
  44. ^ Daniels, Steve (2014-07-22). "Court victory gives FutureGen a green light; ComEd challenge rejected". Crain's Chicago Business. Retrieved 23 October 2014.
  45. ^ Rasmussen, Kristina (2012-04-26). . Illinois Policy Institute - Blog. Archived from the original on 2012-04-26. Retrieved 2019-05-02.
  46. ^ "Group calls for pulling the plug on FutureGen". State Journal-Register. Springfield, IL. 2011-12-20. Retrieved 23 October 2014.
  47. ^ . www.rsinc.com. Archived from the original on December 23, 2007.
  48. ^ a b Mercer, David. "2 FutureGen partners drop out of coal project". Retrieved July 1, 2009.[dead link]
  49. ^ a b Pethokoukis, James (2009-06-25). "AEP, Southern pull out of FutureGen project". Reuters. Retrieved July 1, 2009.

External links edit

  • (down since 2016)
  • related to the Clean Coal Initiative
  • Clean Coal Push Concerns Environmental Activists. October 16, 2005.

futuregen, project, demonstrate, capture, sequestration, waste, carbon, dioxide, from, coal, fired, electrical, generating, station, project, renamed, retrofitting, shuttered, coal, fired, power, plant, meredosia, illinois, with, combustion, generators, waste,. FutureGen was a project to demonstrate capture and sequestration of waste carbon dioxide from a coal fired electrical generating station The project renamed FutureGen 2 0 was retrofitting a shuttered coal fired power plant in Meredosia Illinois with oxy combustion generators The waste CO2 would be piped approximately 30 miles 48 km to be sequestered in underground saline formations FutureGen was a partnership between the United States government and an alliance of primarily coal related corporations Costs were estimated at US 1 65 billion with 1 0 billion provided by the Federal Government 1 2 3 Meredosia Power StationDOE FutureGen concept art c 2007Official nameFutureGen 2 0CountryUnited StatesLocationMorgan County IllinoisCoordinates39 49 23 N 90 33 58 W 39 82306 N 90 56611 W 39 82306 90 56611StatusCancelledOwner s FutureGen Industrial Alliance IncThermal power stationPrimary fuelCoalPower generationNameplate capacity229 MW edit on Wikidata First announced by President George W Bush in 2003 construction started in 2014 after restructuring canceling relocating and restarting 1 4 Citing an inability to commit and spend the funds by deadlines in 2015 the Department of Energy withdrew funds and suspended FutureGen 2 0 in February 2015 The government also cited the Alliance s inability to raise the requisite amount of private funding 5 The Meredosia power plant that had been planned for retrofit was demolished around 2021 6 FutureGen 2 0 would have been the most comprehensive Department of Energy Carbon Capture and Storage demonstration project involving all phases from combustion to sequestration 4 FutureGen s initial plan involved integrated gasification combined cycle technology to produce both electricity and hydrogen Early in the project it was to be sited in Mattoon IL 4 Contents 1 Original project 1 1 Site selection 1 2 Technology 1 3 Challenges 1 4 Funding cancellation 2 Revised plan FutureGen 2 0 2 1 Plans for continuing FutureGen 2 2 Revised project FutureGen 2 0 2 3 FutureGen 2 0 funding cancellation 3 Alliance members 3 1 Former members 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksOriginal project editThe original incarnation of FutureGen was as a public private partnership to build the world s first near zero emissions coal fueled power plant The 275 megawatt plant would be intended to prove the feasibility of producing electricity and hydrogen from coal while capturing and permanently storing carbon dioxide underground The Alliance intended to build the plant in Mattoon Township Coles County Illinois northwest of Mattoon Illinois subject to necessary approvals issuing a Record of Decision by the Department of Energy DOE as part of the National Environmental Policy Act NEPA process 7 FutureGen was to be designed developed and operated by the FutureGen Industrial Alliance a non profit consortium of coal mining and electric utility companies formed to partner with the DOE on the FutureGen project The project was still in the development stage when its funding was cancelled in January 2008 The Alliance decision of the location of the host site subject to DOE s completing NEPA environmental reviews was announced in December 2007 after a two year bidding and review process Construction was scheduled to begin in 2009 with full scale plant operations to begin in 2012 8 The estimated gross project cost including construction and operations and excluding offsetting revenue was 1 65 billion 9 The project was governed by a legally binding cooperative agreement between DOE and the Alliance 10 Under the agreement DOE was to provide 74 of the project s cost with private industry contributing the other 26 The DOE also planned to solicit the financial support and participation of international governments in the FutureGen project since by 2020 more than 60 of man made greenhouse gas emissions are expected to come from developing countries Foreign financial support was to offset a portion of DOE s cost share As of January 2008 the foreign governments of China India Australia South Korea and Japan had expressed interest in participating and sharing the cost of the project 11 FutureGen was to sequester carbon dioxide emissions at a rate of one million metric tons per year for four years which is the scale a Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT report cites as appropriate for proving sequestration The MIT report also states that the priority objective with respect to coal should be the successful large scale demonstration of the technical economic and environmental performance of the technologies that make up all of the major components of a large scale integrated CCS system capture transportation and storage 12 An injection field test similar to this was done in Norway 13 14 In March 2009 Washington Post reported that U S Secretary of Energy Steven Chu expressed support for continuing the project using stimulus funds after some changes that have not yet been specified and making it a part of a larger portfolio of research plants developed in collaboration with other countries 15 Following the successful completion of the first phase in February 2013 the Energy Department announced the beginning of Phase II of the project development with a new cooperative agreement between the FutureGen Industrial Alliance and the Department of Energy This means that the FutureGen project has government support as it moves into its third phase deployment of the project 9 Site selection edit Site selection for the FutureGen facility was based on a competitive process which began in May 2006 Seven states responded 16 to the Site Request for Proposals with a total of 12 proposals Proposals were reviewed against a set of environmental technical regulatory and financial criteria with input from external technical advisors on power plant design and carbon sequestration In July 2006 four candidate sites were selected for further review including an environmental impact analysis as required by NEPA DOE issued its Final Environmental impact statement EIS on November 8 2007 which concluded that all four sites were acceptable from an environmental impact standpoint and all would move forward in the site evaluation process EPA published a Notice of Availability NOA for the EIS in the Federal Register on November 16 2007 17 The DOE is required by federal law to wait at least 30 days after the NOA release before issuing its final Record of Decision ROD The waiting period legally closed on December 17 2007 DOE chose not to issue the ROD and advised the FutureGen Alliance to delay the final site selection announcement which was scheduled to occur at the end of the 30 day waiting period The Alliance chose to move ahead with the announcement citing time money and a commitment to proposers to select the final site by year end Every month of delay can add 10 million to the project s cost solely due to inflation said Michael Mudd the Alliance s chief executive City Proposals FinalistsEffingham Illinois xMarshall Illinois xMattoon Illinois x xTuscola Illinois x xHenderson County Kentucky xBowman County North Dakota xMeigs County Ohio xTuscarawas County Ohio xOdessa Texas x xJewett Texas x xPoint Pleasant West Virginia xGillette Wyoming xThe FutureGen Alliance announced the selection of Mattoon Illinois as the host site on December 18 2007 18 19 According to the EIS Mattoon IL the site is located about 3 5 miles 5 6 km northwest of downtown Mattoon in the eastern part of Mattoon township section 8 on 1 8 km2 440 acres of former farm land The carbon sequestration area is about 8 000 feet 2 4 km below the ground 20 In July 2007 Illinois Public Act 095 0018 became law giving the state of Illinois ownership of and liability for the sequestered gases 21 Technology edit Original FutureGen project was intended to combine and test several new technologies in a single location including coal gasification emissions controls hydrogen production electricity generation and carbon dioxide capture and storage CCS 22 Integrated Gasification Combined Cycle IGCC was the core technology behind FutureGen IGCC power plants use two turbines a gas and a steam turbine to produce electric power more efficiently than pulverized coal plants IGCC plants also make it easier to capture carbon dioxide for carbon sequestration 23 FutureGen was to capture carbon dioxide produced during the gasification process and pump it into deep rock formations thousands of feet under ground FutureGen specifically targeted rock formations containing saline water as these are one of the most abundant types of geologic formations that can be used to store carbon dioxide worldwide 24 A study by the Global Energy Technology Strategy Program estimates the storage capacity of these saline rock formations in the U S to be 2 970 gigatons of carbon dioxide compared to a capacity of 77 gigatons of carbon dioxide for all other types of reservoirs such as depleted gas fields 25 Focusing on rock formations with saline water was intended to help ensure that the lessons learned from the project are broadly transferable throughout the U S and around the world Challenges edit Maintaining the project schedule and keeping costs down were two major challenges with which the DOE and the FutureGen Alliance grappled The project had remained on schedule with the announcement of the host site before the end of 2007 however a desire by DOE to restructure the project s financial arrangement has brought the project to a halt In December 2007 the DOE Acting Deputy Assistant Secretary for Fossil Energy James Slutz stated that projected cost overruns for the project require a reassessment of FutureGen s design And that This will require restructuring FutureGen to maximize the role of private sector innovation facilitate the most productive public private partnership and prevent further cost escalation 26 The FutureGen Alliance wrote a letter to the Department of Energy s Under Secretary C H Bud Albright Jr stating that overall inflation and the rising cost of raw materials and engineering services are driving costs up on energy projects around the world According to James L Connaughton chairman of the White House Council on Environmental Quality the market for steel concrete and power plant components has just gone through the roof globally and much of the reason is the construction of hundreds of new conventional coal plants 27 On January 11 2008 the FutureGen Alliance sent a letter to the DOE offering to lower the government s portion of the project s costs The initial plans had called for DOE to pay based on a percentage of the total cost and their portion had risen from about 620 million to about 1 33 billion The letter indicated that DOE s portion would now be 800 million 28 Risk management was a significant portion of the cost of the first FutureGen experimental implementation 29 FutureGen involved many complex never before solved technology problems The risks also included significant health risks if the untested technology systems failed to work correctly Funding cancellation edit On January 29 2008 the U S Department of Energy announced that it would pull its funding for the project mostly due to higher than expected costs The move is likely to delay the project as other members seek the additional funds that the DOE was to provide The sudden concern over cost after an Illinois site was chosen over those in Texas raised questions about the motives for the cancellation Local and state officials in Illinois including then Governor Rod Blagojevich expressed frustration at the move especially in light of the money and resources that the state had spent to attract the project Democratic Senator Dick Durbin of Illinois accused Energy Secretary Samuel Bodman of cruel deception of Illinoisans by creating false hope in a FutureGen project which he has no intention of funding or supporting 30 Durbin claimed that when the city of Mattoon Illinois was chosen over possible locations in Texas the secretary of energy set out to kill FutureGen 31 Mattoon mayor David Cline said one could question the motivation of the Department of Energy which was ready to move forward with the project until a site other than Texas was chosen 31 In March 2009 Congressional auditors determined that the DOE had miscalculated the government portion of the project s cost overstating the amount by a half billion dollars As a result the Bush administration cited the project as having nearly doubled in cost when in reality it had increased by 39 32 Secretary Bodman stated that with restructuring the FutureGen project DOE plans to equip multiple new clean coal power plants with advanced CCS technology instead of one demonstration plant That will provide more electricity from multiple clean coal plants sequestering at least twice as much CO2 and providing for wider use and more rapid commercialization 33 Revised plan FutureGen 2 0 editPlans for continuing FutureGen edit Despite the cancellation of funding by the DOE the FutureGen Alliance continued to move forward with the project opening an office in Mattoon and planning to buy the land for the plant in August 2008 in partnership with a local group 34 35 During the 2008 U S presidential campaigns Sen Barack Obama pledged his support to clean coal technologies with plans to develop five commercial scale coal plants equipped with CCS technology 36 In November 2008 Fred Palmer senior vice president at Peabody Energy shared his outlook on FutureGen with the American Coalition for Clean Coal Electricity ACCCE saying that the FutureGen Alliance would Make a concerted effort in the Obama administration to reinstate the project and get this built as originally planned 37 On June 12 2009 the DOE announced a restart of design work for the FutureGen project 38 Following the completion of the detailed cost estimate and fundraising activities the press release states the Department of Energy and the FutureGen Alliance will make a decision either to move forward or to discontinue the project early in 2010 Revised project FutureGen 2 0 edit On August 5 2010 the DOE announced a retooling of the FutureGen project dubbed FutureGen 2 0 39 The revised plan includes retrofitting a shuttered coal fired power plant in Meredosia Illinois to demonstrate advanced oxy combustion technology and piping the carbon dioxide 175 miles to Mattoon for underground storage Due to these changes leaders in Mattoon decided to drop out of the FutureGen project 40 The Illinois sites vying for the underground storage portion of the project were in Christian Douglas Fayette and Morgan counties after sites in Adams and Pike counties were cut in December 2010 41 In February 2011 Morgan County was chosen for the sequestration site In Sept 2014 FutureGen received the first ever EPA permits for four class VI carbon dioxide sequestration wells in Morgan County with plans to store 1 1 million metric tons per year for 20 years 42 43 Also in 2014 FutureGen survived a lawsuit from Illinois Electric utility ComEd which challenged the state s ability to impose a surcharge on all customers to pay for FutureGen electricity 44 According to critics including the Illinois Policy Institute the plan presents major environmental and fiscal pitfalls 45 46 FutureGen 2 0 funding cancellation edit The Department of Energy ordered suspension of FutureGen 2 0 in February 2015 The funds appropriated by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 needed to be committed by July 1 and spent by Sept 30 2015 The government also cited the Alliance s inability to raise the requisite amount of private funding Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz explained at a press conference If you look between now and July 1 without them having closed their financing and try as we might we just don t see how it gets over the finish line At the time of suspension the power plant part of the project had spent 116 5 million and the sequestration part had spent 86 million 5 Alliance members editThe FutureGen Industrial Alliance is a consortium of 10 power producers and electric utilities from around the globe 47 Company HeadquartersAnglo American London EnglandBHP Billiton Energy Coal Melbourne AustraliaChina Huaneng Group Beijing ChinaConsol Energy Pittsburgh United StatesE ON Louisville United StatesFoundation Coal Linthicum Heights United StatesPeabody Energy St Louis United StatesRio Tinto Gillette United StatesXstrata Sydney AustraliaFormer members edit Four companies initially a part of the FutureGen Industrial Alliance have since dropped out of the project Company HeadquartersAmerican Electric Power 48 Columbus United StatesLuminant 49 Dallas United StatesPPL Energy Services Group 49 Allentown United StatesSouthern Company 48 Atlanta United StatesSee also editCoal pollution mitigation Carbon capture and storage Combined cycle Gasification Asia Pacific Partnership for Clean Development and Climate North American Carbon ProgramReferences edit a b Talbot David 15 September 2014 Construction Begins at a Carbon Capture Plant but Will It Ever Be Completed MIT Technology Review FutureGen Fact Sheet Carbon Dioxide Capture and Storage Project MIT Carbon Capture and Sequestration Technologies Program Retrieved 25 October 2014 FAQs FutureGen Alliance Archived from the original on 2 November 2014 Retrieved 25 October 2014 a b c Folger Peter 10 Feb 2014 The FutureGen Carbon Capture and Sequestration Project A Brief History and Issues for Congress PDF Report Congressional Research Service Retrieved 21 July 2014 a b Natter Ari 4 February 2015 DOE Suspends 1 Billion in FutureGen Funds Killing Carbon Capture Demonstration Project Energy and Climate Report Bloomberg BNA Archived from the original on 12 February 2015 Retrieved 10 February 2015 McDaniel Ogletree Samantha 26 July 2021 Piece by piece landmark Meredosia smokestacks fading Jacksonville Journal Courier Retrieved 27 May 2023 How Much Does Viasat Internet Cost www rsinc com Archived from the original on February 2 2008 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2008 02 16 Retrieved 2008 02 02 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link a b Carbon Capture and Sequestration Technologies MIT DOE Cooperative Agreement DE FC26 06NT42073 FutureGen A Sequestration and Hydrogen Research Initiative How Much Does Viasat Internet Cost www rsinc com Archived from the original on May 13 2008 The Future of Coal http web mit edu coal The Future of Coal pdf Sleipner A Carbon Dioxide Capture and Storage Project Archived 2006 11 01 at the Wayback Machine Monitoring of CO2 injected at Sleipner using time lapse seismic data Kindy Kimberly 2009 03 06 New Life for Clean Coal Project Washington Post Benman Keith 2004 03 10 FutureGen not in near future for Indiana The Times Munster IN Retrieved 2007 12 18 Bids by states to host FutureGen Federal Register Vol 72 No 221 Archived 2008 02 16 at the Wayback Machine Mattoon lands FutureGen power plant The News Gazette Champaign Urbana 2007 12 18 Archived from the original on December 5 2008 Retrieved 2007 12 18 Illinois chosen for experimental coal plant Crain s Chicago Business 2007 12 18 Archived from the original on 2007 12 23 Retrieved 2007 12 18 FutureGen Alliance Environmental Information Volumes for Mattoon Illinois Archived 2008 02 16 at the Wayback Machine PDF 12 1 MB December 1 2006 Illinois General Assembly Full Text of Public Act 095 0018 www ilga gov FutureGen Technology Archived from the original on 2008 01 01 Retrieved 2008 01 04 FutureGen Technology Overview FutureGen Coal Gasification Archived from the original on 2008 01 13 Retrieved 2008 01 21 Coal Gassification FutureGen Carbon Sequestration Archived from the original on 2008 01 12 Retrieved 2008 01 21 Carbon Sequestration Carbon Dioxide Capture and Geologic Storage A Core Element of A Global Energy Technology Strategy To Address Climate Change p 26 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2008 02 16 Retrieved 2008 02 02 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Fowler Tom 2007 12 18 Illinois wins coal project and along with it a tussle Official warned against announcing winning town in 1 8 billion project Houston Chronicle Retrieved 2008 01 31 Wald Matthew L 2007 12 18 New Type of Coal Plant Moves Ahead Haltingly The New York Times Retrieved 2009 03 10 Mitchell Tim 2008 01 30 No future for FutureGen Champaign News Gazette Retrieved 2008 01 31 Final Risk Assessment Report for the FutureGen Project Environmental Impact Statement Archived 2008 02 16 at the Wayback Machine U S Department of Energy October 2 2007 U S lawmakers Energy Department pulls support for FutureGen Daily Herald Associated Press 2008 01 29 Retrieved 2009 03 10 a b Secter Bob 2008 01 30 Energy Department backing out of Illinois bound FutureGen project officials say Chicago Tribune Retrieved 2008 02 02 permanent dead link Wald Matthew 2009 03 10 Energy Dept Said to Err on Coal Project New York Times Retrieved 2009 12 12 Bodman Samuel W 2008 02 06 New technology makes FutureGen a waste of tax money St Louis Post Dispatch Archived from the original on 2008 02 10 Retrieved 2008 02 11 Stroud Rob 2008 04 19 FutureGen sounds upbeat note Supporters lobbying presidential candidates Decatur Herald amp Review Retrieved 2008 04 22 Thilmony Meg 2008 04 19 Alliance local group buying land for FutureGen plant Champaign News Gazette Barack Obama and Joe Biden New Energy for America Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2008 10 17 Retrieved 2008 11 05 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link BarackObama com Retrieved November 25 2008 Lucas Joe 2008 11 21 No matter what you ve heard FutureGen is alive Behind the Plug blog AmericasPower org Archived from the original on 16 September 2014 Retrieved 23 October 2014 Secretary Chu Announces Agreement on FutureGen Project in Mattoon IL Press release US Dept of Energy June 12 2009 Secretary Chu Announces FutureGen 2 0 Press release US Dept of Energy August 5 2010 Kacich Tom 2010 08 11 Coles County says no to FutureGen Champaign News Gazette Retrieved 2010 08 12 FutureGen narrows potential carbon sites to 4 Associated Press 2010 12 20 Retrieved 2011 02 15 EPA approves FutureGen plan for carbon dioxide storage St Louis Post Dispatch Associated Press 2014 09 02 Retrieved 23 October 2014 FutureGen Alliance 2 0 Permit Application U S Environmental Protection Agency Retrieved 23 October 2014 Daniels Steve 2014 07 22 Court victory gives FutureGen a green light ComEd challenge rejected Crain s Chicago Business Retrieved 23 October 2014 Rasmussen Kristina 2012 04 26 Budget Hawk meet Tree Hugger Illinois Policy Institute Blog Archived from the original on 2012 04 26 Retrieved 2019 05 02 Group calls for pulling the plug on FutureGen State Journal Register Springfield IL 2011 12 20 Retrieved 23 October 2014 How Much Does Viasat Internet Cost www rsinc com Archived from the original on December 23 2007 a b Mercer David 2 FutureGen partners drop out of coal project Retrieved July 1 2009 dead link a b Pethokoukis James 2009 06 25 AEP Southern pull out of FutureGen project Reuters Retrieved July 1 2009 External links editFutureGen Industrial Alliance Inc down since 2016 Marshall University Studies related to the Clean Coal Initiative Clean Coal Push Concerns Environmental Activists October 16 2005 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title FutureGen amp oldid 1157309333, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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