A New Energy System for the Intermountain West – Built on Domestic Primary Resources and Negative Carbon Emissions
Global energy security, anthropogenic climate change, and
high energy prices combine to harness market forces and ingenuity like never
before to design a fundamentally different energy supply and distribution
system in our nation. The Intermountain West and adjacent
Such a new system could be built around coal gasification combined cycle
power
plants (CGCC plants), combined with gasification of biomass such as the
high-yield prairie switchgrass. This system would produce methane for
conventional
power
generation, as in today's pulverized coal plants and at a
lower cost than current use of natural gas, and allow co-generation of
hydrogen, biofuels, dimethyl ethylene or any other ‘designer fuel'
(polygeneration), plus CO2. Separation of the CO2 from other gases would occur
at the pre-combustion stage, making the task more efficient and much cheaper
than current attempts at post-combustion separation of CO2 from
power
plant
flue gas.
The associated production of moderately priced CO2 would act as a stimulus
for expansion of CO2 enhanced oil recovery (and gas recovery?); an industry
that currently is supply-limited in the
power
and fuel generating system.
Finally, all primary energy sources for such a system would be domestic, a
blend of fossil and renewable, and in enormous supply throughout the region.