Title
The impacts of CO2 capture on transboundary air pollution in the Netherlands
Author
Koornneef, J.
van Harmelen, T.
van Horssen, A.
van Gijlswijk, R.
Ramirez, A.
Faaij, A.
Turkenburg, W.
TNO Bouw en Ondergrond
Publication year
2009
Abstract
The focus of this research is to develop a first assessment of the impacts of the implementation of CO2 capture technologies in the Dutch power sector on the transboundary air pollution (SO2,NOX,NH3,NMV OC,PM10 and PM2.5) levels in 2020. Results show that for the power sector SO2 emissions will be very low for scenarios that include large scale implementation of Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS). The annual emissions of NOx are estimated to be lower in all scenarios with greenhouse gas reductions. However, applying the post-combustion technology on existing power plants may result in higher NOx emissions per kWh. Both SO2 and NOx emissions from the power sector are a substantial part of the current national total. Large scale implementation of the post-combustion CO2 capture technology may result in more than 5 times higher NH3 emissions compared to scenarios without CCS and to other capture options (i.e. pre-combustion and oxyfuel combustion). Particulate Matter (PM) emissions are lower in the scenarios with CO2 reduction. A scenario with large scale implementation of the oxyfuel technology shows the lowest emissions of PM. In the scenarios with post-combustion capture Non Methane Volatile Organic Compounds emissions may increase due to the emission of solvents used in the capture process. The main conclusion is that climate policy and air quality policy are entwined and may result in synergies and trade-offs. Quantification of these synergies and trade-offs however encompasses inaccuracies due to data uncertainty and knowledge gaps. © 2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Subject
Environment
Air quality
CO2 capture and storage
Criteria pollutants
National Emission Ceiling
Air quality policy
Carbon capture and storage
Climate policy
CO capture and storage
Criteria pollutants
Data uncertainty
Greenhouse gas reductions
Knowledge gaps
National Emission Ceiling
Netherlands
Non-methane volatile organic compounds
Oxyfuel combustion
Oxyfuel technology
Particulate matter emissions
Post-combustion
Power sector
Pre-combustions
Trans-boundary
Air quality
Combustion
Global warming
Greenhouse gases
Methane
Particulate emissions
Permanent magnets
Pollution
Reduction
Smoke
Technology
Thermochemistry
Volatile organic compounds
Carbon monoxide
To reference this document use:
http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:2fdb972c-7e5c-4870-84b1-cf87f8c42c37
TNO identifier
241388
ISSN
1876-6102
Source
Energy Procedia, 1 (1), 3787-3794
Document type
article