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Re-discover Power of Coal: China Advances in Clean Coal & CTX Technology

Not sure if there's much to learn from Japan. I keep hearing about these amazing Japanese environmental technologies but you can see here that the #1 publisher of research in environmental science, energy, agriculture, chemical engineering and materials science has been either the US or China:

SJR - International Science Ranking
SJR - International Science Ranking
SJR - International Science Ranking
SJR - International Science Ranking
SJR - International Science Ranking

I also do not know of any specifically named energy technology from Japan. Can someone actually NAME a technology in this area from Japan?
 
Not sure if there's much to learn from Japan. I keep hearing about these amazing Japanese environmental technologies but you can see here that the #1 publisher of research in environmental science, energy, agriculture, chemical engineering and materials science has been either the US or China:

SJR - International Science Ranking
SJR - International Science Ranking
SJR - International Science Ranking
SJR - International Science Ranking
SJR - International Science Ranking

I also do not know of any specifically named energy technology from Japan. Can someone actually NAME a technology in this area from Japan?


http://www.greenindustryplatform.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/jgi_final-highres-web.pdf

Not sure if there's much to learn from Japan. I keep hearing about these amazing Japanese environmental technologies but you can see here that the #1 publisher of research in environmental science, energy, agriculture, chemical engineering and materials science has been either the US or China:

SJR - International Science Ranking
SJR - International Science Ranking
SJR - International Science Ranking
SJR - International Science Ranking
SJR - International Science Ranking

I also do not know of any specifically named energy technology from Japan. Can someone actually NAME a technology in this area from Japan?

Green Innovations | Japan's Exports - USA - JETRO
 
But why I can't see the stars in the night in Tokyo?Some people say Tokyo is still polluted.
 
The Chinese government has announced new target of cutting pollution from coal-fired power plants by 60 percent by 2020.

By upgrading the plants, China aims for a reduction in raw coal use of around 100 million metric tons, which would help improve its own environment and help contribute to a better world.

During his stay in Paris for the climate talks, Chinese President Xi Jinping reiterated China's commitment to helping in the global struggle to limit the effects of climate change.

China's bid to reduce emissions means a big market for those countries, such as Japan, that are at the cutting edge of energy efficiency and environmental protection.

China and Japan have cooperated in this field for three decades. They launched an annual forum on improving energy efficiency and environmental protection in 2006, at which their officials, researchers and entrepreneurs put their heads together to find areas for cooperation. They signed 26 deals on saving energy and protecting environment on the eve of the Paris climate talks, increasing the number of projects to 259 in nine years.

If China wants to take a leading role in climate change and sustainable energy policy, it would do well to look at the lessons from Japan's experience.

When Japan's economy grew at an annual rate of 10 percent in the 1960s, air pollution in several cities was alarming. Emissions of nitrogen dioxide, carbon monoxide and sulfur dioxide tripled, causing the pollution-related illnesses such as Yokkaichi asthma and Minamata disease (mercury poisoning)-both named after the cities where they first appeared-and cadmium poisoning.

It was the oil crisis in the 1970s that catalyzed the rapid turnaround that allowed Japan to become an "efficiency superpower".

Japan charted a clear course and gave marching orders to its bureaucracy. What followed was a wholesale reorganization of the government's attitude toward energy security and a nationwide effort to reduce energy consumption, and promote better conservation and efficiency. By harnessing the conservation efforts of millions of households and businesses, Japan succeeded in restraining the growth in its energy consumption even as its economy continued to expand throughout the 1980s and 1990s. By most estimates, Japan leads the world today in energy efficiency.

To some extent, Japan has cleaned itself up through a shift to lighter manufacturing and allowing its companies to move much of their energy-intensive primary processing to other countries while concentrating on high-tech products further up the value chain. China can still learn from Japan how to become more energy efficient and how to protect its environment from rapid industrialization.

Japan provided China with loans for several years to put toward important environmental initiatives, such as installing desulfurization and dust collection systems at ironworks, building water supply systems and constructing sewage networks. Japan's support and experience mean a lot to China.

And there is plenty of room for the two countries to strengthen their cooperation in energy saving and environmental protection.

China is thirsty for Japan's advanced environmental technologies, and China remains a big, relatively cheap laboratory for Japanese companies to do research and development.

China frequently sees many of its cities wreathed in choking smog and has to deal with other severe environmental problems, while Japan is still struggling to move out of recession. So this is would be a win-win proposition.

The author is China Daily's Tokyo bureau chief.

Lessons can be learned from Japan's energy efficiency experience[2]- Chinadaily.com.cn


Nice article, yes lots of energy efficiency experience to learn from Japan. Coal will continue to be one source of energy for China, and that it's critical importance to cut pollution (60% by 2020 as targeted) associated with coal-based power generation with whatever possible techs, those developed domestically or from Japan. There are at least two areas where both countries can explore:

Carbon Capture and Storage

China has begun testing of various CCS (Carbon Capture and Storage) solutions, and has built the world's first near-zero emissions coal-fueled power plant - the Huaneng Tianjin IGCC (Integrated Gasification Combined Cycle) Plant - since 2009 (operational since 2011).

greengen-tianjin-jpg.271633

Huaneng Tianjin IGCC (Integrated Gasification Combined Cycle) Plant, Phase 1

The Tianjin IGCC plant is just the starter for nation-wide INDC (Intended Nationally Determined Contribution) program to use modern high efficiency low emission (HELE) coal-fired power generation and develop carbon capture and storage (CCS). The five-year plan is seeking to reduce all emissions from coal-fired power and other industrial uses, not just CO2 emissions but also SOx, NOx and other particulate matter. Steps are taken to close down smaller inefficient power stations and is building large HELE coal-fired power plants to meet electricity demand.

GreenGen to build China's first near-zero emissions power plant
Renewables Aren't Enough. Clean Coal Is the Future | WIRED
China’s embrace of clean coal an example to follow – WCA - Power Engineering International

Coal to X

Dr. Yang Yong (Director of R&D Center and Deputy General Manager of Synfuels China) received the 2015 CTX Award for his achievements in developing a new generation Fischer Tropsch process. Dr. Yang Yong has been instrumental in defining a new Fischer-Tropsch process which has been successfully operated in several demonstration plants in China. Given the key role played by the reaction catalyst, Dr. Yang and his team developed an iron-based catalyst, for the production of which a plant is being constructed. Many Chinese scientists have also received CTX awards in previous years:

untitled-png.265620


China's 9 million barrels coal-to-oil plant comes online | Xinhua | Page 2

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Significant coal-to-liquid project in production in Ningxia

ECNS App Download

The world's biggest single coal-to-liquid (CTL) project went into production Wednesday in northwest China's Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region.

The project, undertaken by a subsidiary of the state-owned Shenhua Group, consists of homegrown technology, equipment and materials, breaking the longtime foreign monopoly in CTL core technology.

Chinese President Xi Jinping congratulated Shenhua Ningxia Coal Industry Group on the start of the project. He described it as a "useful exploration" of secure, effective, clean and low-carbon energy development and a major result of the country's innovation strategy.

It will help promote clean and effective use of coal, improve China's ability to guarantee energy security, and boost regional development, Xi said.

China has rich coal resources but lacks oil and gas. Currently more than 60 percent of its oil is imported. The National Energy Administration estimates that China will need 610 million tonnes of oil in 2020, 68 percent of which would have to be imported.

The project drew an investment of about 55 billion yuan (7.9 billion U.S. dollars). It is able to turn more than 20 million tonnes of coal to 4 million tonnes of oil products annually, including 2.7 million tonnes of diesel, 980,000 tonnes of naphtha petroleum and 340,000 tonnes of liquefied gas:coffee:, according to Yao Min, deputy general manager of Shenhua Ningxia Coal Industry Group.

"Coal-to-liquid technology provides another solution to China's lack of oil," Yao said.

Byproducts include 200,000 tonnes of sulfur, 75,000 tonnes of mixed alcohol and 145,000 tonnes of ammonium sulphate, Yao said.

"If the oil products are promoted in first-tier cities like Beijing and Shanghai, they will help reduce car emissions and tackle the problem of smog," Yao added.

A trial use of the diesel made from coal on Beijing's sanitation vehicles showed significant declines of emissions of pollutants, according to Cai Lihong, who takes charge of the project's construction.

Spending on environmental protection in the project totaled 6.2 billion yuan, or more than 11 percent of the total investment.

http://www.ecns.cn/business/2016/12-29/239477.shtml
 
Ningxia coal-to-liquid plant delivers first shipment: paper

:enjoy::tup:

全球单套规模最大的煤制油项目在宁夏投产 总投资约550亿元:china:

2016-12-28

【观察者网综合】经过10多年的艰辛探索和3年多的建设,全球单体规模最大的煤制油工程——神华宁夏煤业集团煤制油示范项目——建成投产庆祝仪式28日在宁夏银川市郊的宁东能源化工基地煤制油项目区举行,中共中央总书记、国家主席、中央军委主席习近平对此作出重要指示。今年7月19日,习近平曾来此考察,肯定了我国在煤化工领域取得的创新成就。

20161228220810813.jpg


2013年 9月28日拍摄的神华宁煤集团年产400万吨煤炭间接液化示范项目建设工地。

综合新华社、央视报道,该项目总投资达550亿元,属国家级示范性工程。项目建成投产后年产油品405万吨,是目前世界上单套投资规模最大、装置最大、拥有中国自主知识产权的煤炭间接液化示范项目。

20161228221404978.jpg


今天的央视新闻联播把第二条和第三条给了神华宁煤集团煤制油项目。

据了解,该项目承担着国家37项重大技术、装备及材料的国产化任务,打破了国外对煤制油化工核心技术的长期垄断,探索出了科技含量高、附加值高、产业链长的煤炭深加工产业发展模式;项目对提高我国能源体系抵御风险的能力,提升国内装备制造业水平,加快我国油品质量升级进程等具有重要意义。

习近平:对我国增强能源自主保障能力意义重大

今天的投产庆祝仪式上宣读了习近平的重要指示,他代表党中央对项目建成投产表示热烈的祝贺,向参与工程建设、生产运行、技术研发的广大科技人员、干部职工表示诚挚的问候。

习近平指出,这一重大项目建成投产,对我国增强能源自主保障能力、推动煤炭清洁高效利用、促进民族地区发展具有重大意义,是对能源安全高效清洁低碳发展方式的有益探索,是实施创新驱动发展战略的重要成果。这充分说明,转变经济发展方式、调整经济结构,推进供给侧结构性改革、构建现代产业体系,必须大力推进科技创新,加快推动科技成果向现实生产力转化。

习近平希望同志们再接再厉、精益求精,保证项目安全、稳定、清洁运行,不断扩大我国在煤炭加工转化领域的技术和产业优势,加快推进能源生产和消费革命,为实现“两个一百年”奋斗目标、实现中华民族伟大复兴的中国梦作出新的更大的贡献。

20161228220849606.jpg


7月19日,在宁东能源化工基地,习近平察看煤制油项目变换装置区,结合展板和主要产品展示,了解宁东基地规划建设总体情况,同技术研发团队代表交流。

今年7月19日下午,在考察宁夏期间,习近平来到宁东能源化工基地,详细了解全球单体规模最大的煤制油工程项目建设进展情况,肯定了我国在煤化工领域取得的创新成就。在现场数百名员工热情的欢呼声中,习近平即兴讲话。他强调,社会主义是干出来的。正是靠着工人阶级埋头苦干、真抓实干的拼搏精神,我们才能实现一个又一个伟大目标,取得一个又一个丰硕成果。展望未来,实现第一个百年奋斗目标胜利在望。中华民族积蓄的能量太久了,要爆发出来去实现伟大的中国梦。这是我们这一代人的历史使命,我们每一个人都在自己的岗位上为实现这个目标而奋斗。

自主知识产权成套技术打破国外垄断

众所周知,我国能源资源结构存在“富煤、贫油、少气”的特点,当前石油对外依存度已超过60%。煤制油项目对解决我国油气资源短缺、平衡能源结构、推进国家中长期能源发展战略,降低对外依存度、保障国家能源安全及国民经济发展具有重大意义。

从1999年,煤制油项目前期工作就已开始。2004年,国家发改委确定由神华宁煤集团建设国家级煤制油示范项目。2013年9月,项目正式获批。这个项目采用了具有我国自主知识产权的中科合成油公司中温浆态床费托合成成套技术,打破了国外的技术垄断,是我国自主研发煤化工关键技术的一次历史性突破。

宁东能源化工基地是国家重点建设的十四个重要煤化工基地之一。2013年9月28日,神华宁煤集团年产400万吨煤炭间接液化示范项目在该基地煤化工业园区A区正式开工建设,总占地面积800多公顷,计划2016年建成投产。项目建成后,预计年均销售收入266亿元,年均利税总额153亿元。

20161228221241642.jpg


2013年9月28日拍摄的神华宁煤集团年产400万吨煤炭间接液化示范项目建设工地。

国家能源局原监管总监谭荣尧当初在开工仪式上表示,2012年,我国石油对外依存度已达58.7%,天然气对外依存度已超过28.9%,而且还在快速上升。建设400万吨煤炭间接液化示范项目,将为我国实现多元化油品来源,提高战略安全探索了新途径。

据悉,这一全球单体规模最大的煤制油项目还将通过系统集成和优化,强化节能节水措施,同时煤炭间接液化的合成油品具有超低硫等特点,有利于降低二氧化硫、氮氧化物、碳氢化合物和颗粒物等污染物的排放,有效降低城市空气污染,防止雾霾出现。

如今,在2016年进入尾声的时候,这个项目顺利投产。

在12月9日,神华宁煤煤制油示范项目合成装置在先后产出费脱轻质油、稳定重质油、稳定蜡后,最终产出合格蜡,标志着关键装置已经打通流程。到12月21日,油品A线一次试车成功,打通全流程,产出合格油品。

神华宁煤集团副总经理姚敏今天在投产庆祝仪式上表示,该项目总投资约550亿元,是目前世界石油化工及煤化工行业一次性投资建设规模最大的化工项目,每年转化煤炭2046万吨,年产油品405万吨,其中柴油273万吨、石脑油98万吨、液化气34万吨;副产硫磺20万吨、混醇7.5万吨、硫酸铵14.5万吨。

将带动国家装备制造业整体发展

神华宁煤集团煤制油项目重点开展中科合成油公司费托合成技术及油品加工成套技术的百万吨级工业化示范,10万标立方米/小时空分成套技术和2200吨干粉煤加压气化炉技术等重大技术、设备及关键材料国产化。

据神华宁煤集团介绍,按工艺技术、装备台套数统计,该项目国产化率达98.5%,一批国内装备制造企业在联合攻关过程中提升了竞争力,甚至挤掉了欧、美、日制造巨头,成功实现了制造业的华丽“逆袭”,带动国家装备制造业整体发展。

当前我国煤炭开发、使用带来巨大环境压力,清洁化利用势在必行。煤制油项目生产的合成油品,有利于推进我国油品升级,具有超低硫、低芳烃、高十六烷值、低灰份的特点,这些指标均优于国V和欧V标准,可有效降低城市空气污染。

“如果该油品能在北京、上海等一线城市推广应用,对解决城市汽车尾气污染、雾霾问题,将是很好的途径。”神华宁煤集团煤制油项目建设指挥部总指挥蔡力宏说,根据北京市环卫车辆试用此种柴油的情况来看,各种污染物排放明显降低。

而按照宁夏“一号工程”蓝图:到2020年,神华宁煤煤化工基地每年将产出油品800万吨、聚烯烃200万吨,总产值将突破800亿元,新增就业岗位10万个。而以煤制油项目为龙头的宁东基地,地区生产总值将达到2000亿元。煤制油项目,对促进宁夏经济社会发展意义重大。

20161228221345818.JPG


神华宁煤集团年产400万吨煤炭间接液化示范项目在建设中

原帖地址:http://www.guancha.cn/Project/2016_12_28_386635.shtml
 
Everything You Think You Know About Coal in China Is Wrong
By Melanie Hart, Luke Bassett, and Blaine Johnson Posted on May 15, 2017, 12:01 am

HartChinaCoalBrief2.jpg

AP/Mark Schiefelbein
A worker watches as a conveyor loads coal onto a trailer truck at a coal mine near Ordos in northern China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, November 2015.


See also: “Research Note on U.S. and Chinese Coal-Fired Power Data” by Melanie Hart, Luke Bassett, and Blaine Johnson

China’s energy markets send mixed signals about the nation’s policy intentions and emissions trajectory. Renewable energy analysts tend to focus on China’s massive renewable expansion and view the nation as a global clean energy leader; coal proponents and climate skeptics are more likely to focus on the number of coal plants in China—both in operation and under construction—and claim its climate rhetoric is more flash than substance.

In December 2016, the Center for American Progress brought a group of energy experts to China to find out what is really happening. We visited multiple coal facilities—including a coal-to-liquids plant—and went nearly 200 meters down one of China’s largest coal mines to interview engineers, plant managers, and local government officials working at the front lines of coal in China.

We found that the nation’s coal sector is undergoing a massive transformation that extends from the mines to the power plants, from Ordos to Shanghai. China is indeed going green. The nation is on track to overdeliver on the emissions reduction commitments it put forward under the Paris climate agreement, and making coal cleaner is an integral part of the process.

From a climate perspective, the ideal scenario would be for China to shut down all of its coal-fired power plants and switch over to clean energy full stop. In reality, China’s energy economy is a massive ship that cannot turn on a dime. The shift toward renewables is happening: China’s Paris commitment includes a promise to install 800 gigawatts to 1,000 gigawatts of new renewable capacity by 2030, an amount equivalent to the capacity of the entire U.S. electricity system.1 While China and the United States have roughly the same land mass, however, China has 1.3 billion people to the United States’ 325 million.2 It needs an electricity system that is much larger, so adding the renewable equivalent of one entire U.S. electricity system is not enough to replace coal in the near to medium term. To bridge the gap, China is rolling out new technologies to drastically reduce local air pollution and climate emissions from the nation’s remaining coal plants.

This issue brief covers three things American observers need to understand about coal in China:
  1. China’s new coal-fired power plants are cleaner than anything operating in the United States.
  2. China’s emissions standards for conventional air pollutants from coal-fired power plants are stricter than the comparable U.S. standards.
  3. Demand for coal-fired power is falling so quickly in China that the nation cannot support its existing fleet. Many of the coal-fired power plants that skeptics point to as evidence against a Chinese energy transformation are actually white elephants that Chinese leaders are already targeting in a wave of forced plant closures.
Energy solutions that work well for China will not necessarily work well for the United States. In addition to the massive population disparity, the United States has access to cheap and plentiful shale gas, and China does not. If China is going to reduce emissions substantially, more efficient coal generation has to be part of its equation, at least for the near to medium term. In the United States, investing in next-generation clean coal plants is not a good solution because natural gas is cheap, plentiful, and lower-emitting than all but the most expensive coal-fired power.

Regardless of what works best in the U.S. market, understanding how Beijing is transforming its coal sectors is critical for understanding what to expect from the Chinese energy market going forward and how we should view China’s position in the global effort to combat climate change.

China is greening its coal fleet

Beijing is stuck between a rock and a hard place. On the one hand, China cannot eradicate coal-fired power from its energy mix overnight. China has not yet figured out how to develop its own natural gas supplies—which are more difficult to access and therefore more expensive than those in the United States—and renewable energy expansion takes time. On the other hand, Chinese citizens are demanding cleaner air, and they want immediate improvements. Air quality is now a political priority for the Chinese Communist Party on par with economic growth and corruption. This means that China cannot continue to run the same high-pollution coal plants that were considered acceptable decades ago. Beijing’s solution is to move full speed ahead with renewables while simultaneously investing in what may become the most efficient, least polluting coal fleet the world has ever seen.

Not all coal-fired power is created equal. Emissions and efficiency—the latter being the amount of coal consumed per unit of power produced, which also affects emissions—vary dramatically based on the type of coal and coal-burning technology used. What many U.S. analyses of China’s coal sector overlook is the fact that Beijing has been steadily shutting down the nation’s older, low-efficiency, and high-emissions plants to replace them with new, lower-emitting coal plants that are more efficient that anything operating in the United States.

To better understand where China’s coal fleet is going, CAP compared the top 100 most efficient coal-fired power units in the United States with the top 100 in China. (see Tables A1 and A2) The difference is astounding.

Compared with the Chinese coal fleet, even the best U.S. plants are running older, less efficient technologies. Coal-fired power plants can generally be broken down into three categories:
  1. Subcritical: In these conventional power plants, coal is ignited to boil water, the water creates steam, and the steam rotates a turbine to generate electricity.3 The term “subcritical” indicates that internal steam pressure and temperature do not exceed the critical point of water—705 degrees Fahrenheit and 3,208 pounds per square inch.4
  2. Supercritical: These plants use high-tech materials to achieve internal steam temperatures in the 1,000–1,050 degrees Fahrenheit range and internal pressure levels that are higher than the critical point of water, thus spinning the turbines much faster and generating more electricity with less coal.5
  3. Ultra-supercritical: These plants use additional technology innovations to bring temperatures to more than 1,400 degrees Fahrenheit and pressure levels to more than 5,000 pounds per square inch, thus further improving efficiency.6
The U.S. coal fleet is much older than China’s: The average age of operating U.S. coal plants is 39 years, with 88 percent built between 1950 and 1990.7 Among the top 100 most efficient plants in the United States, the initial operating years range from 1967 to 2012. In China, the oldest plant on the top 100 list was commissioned in 2006, and the youngest was commissioned in 2015.

The United States only has one ultra-supercritical power plant.8 Everything else is subcritical or, at best, supercritical. In contrast, China is retiring its older plants and replacing them with ultra-supercritical facilities that produce more energy with less coal and generate less emissions as well. Out of China’s top 100 units, 90 are ultra-supercritical plants.

ChinaCoal-WEB-Fig1-520.png

When the capacity of each of the top 100 units in each nation is taken into account, ultra-supercritical technology accounts for 92 percent of Chinese top 100 capacity and less than one percent—0.76 percent—of U.S. top 100 capacity. Because the technological makeup of the Chinese plants is different, their emissions levels are different as well. In the United States, the total nameplate capacity of our top 100 most efficient coal-fired power units is 80.1 gigawatts, and their cumulative annual carbon emissions amount to 361,924,475 metric tons.9 Meanwhile, the total nameplate capacity of China’s top 100 units is 82.6 gigawatts, and their cumulative annual carbon emissions are an estimated 342,586,908 metric tons.10 Since China’s fleet uses more advanced technology, it also consumes less coal: an average of 286.42 grams of coal equivalent, or gce, consumed per kilowatt-hour of power produced in China versus 374.96 gce consumed per kilowatt-hour produced at lower heating value in the United States.

To be sure, China still has plenty of older coal-fired power units that are not using the most advanced technology. According to the latest third-party research from S&P Global Platts, which provides research on global energy infrastructure, when the data set is expanded to include all operating coal-fired power capacity in China—which totals 920 gigawatts—approximately 19 percent uses ultra-supercritical technology, 25 percent uses supercritical technology, and 56 percent uses subcritical technology.11 However, the new builds are increasingly ultra-supercritical plants, and Beijing is steadily ratcheting up the emissions requirements and efficiency standards for those older plants as well.

By 2020, every existing coal-fired power unit in China must meet an efficiency standard of 310 gce per kilowatt-hour; any units that do not meet that standard by 2020 will be retired. In contrast, none of the current top 100 most efficient U.S. coal-fired power units would meet that same efficiency standard today. (see Table A2)

ChinaCoal-WEB-Fig2-520.png

The simple fact is that the United States has a wide array of cheap and abundant energy options that now compete with coal-fired electricity generation—particularly shale gas and renewables. Given the additional context of falling U.S. electricity demand and improving efficiency, even U.S. electric utility executives have indicated that their business models are rebalancing toward these options—and away from coal.12 Although higher-tech plants, such as ultra-supercritical plants, have lower operation and maintenance costs than their less efficient counterparts, overnight capital costs are, on average, around 17 percent higher.13 In a market where even the least expensive coal-fired plants are struggling to compete with shale-gas-fired plants, those investments do not make good financial sense.

One thing China’s experience makes very clear is that even if the United States were to invest in newer, more efficient coal plants, it would not be a major jobs generator on par with renewable energy. As China’s power plants are becoming more efficient in their energy consumption and emissions, they are also becoming more efficient in terms of labor. The CAP research team visited the Shanghai Waigaoqiao No. 3 power station. That plant runs two 1,000 megawatt ultra-supercritical units and supports 250 employees.14 In contrast, the nearby Waigaoqiao No. 1 and Shidongkou No. 1 power stations each run four 300 megawatt subcritical units and employ 600 people and 1,000 people, respectively.15

The same thing is happening in China’s coal mines. As the operations become higher tech, they become cleaner and more efficient, and those jobs decrease as well. This is one reason Beijing expects its coal sector to lay off 1.3 million workers from 2016 to 2020.16 Chinese leaders view renewable energy as a much more dependable employment generator; they expect the nation’s renewable sectors to generate 13 million new jobs by 2020.17

China’s energy employment shifts follow a pattern that has been unfolding in the United States for decades. U.S. coal mining employment peaked in the 1920s and then began a long and steady decline. From 1983 to 2014, U.S. coal production increased more than 28 percent, but employment still fell 59 percent.18 This reflects a shift in U.S. coal production from more labor-intensive underground mining in the eastern United States to more highly mechanized and easily accessible surface mining in the west.19 Falling U.S. electricity demand, rising energy efficiency, and sharp price drops for natural gas, solar, and wind compounded U.S. energy employment shifts by reducing utilities’ dependence on and demand for coal.20 At year-end 2016, the United States had a total of 54,030 coal operator employees nationwide.21 In contrast, between 2015 and 2016, the United States added 73,615 new jobs in solar energy generation—a nearly 25 percent year-on-year increase—bringing the total number of U.S. solar energy generation jobs to 373,807 nationwide.22

ChinaCoal-WEB-Fig3-520.png

China’s emissions standards are stronger than ours

One of the levers that Beijing is pulling to move China’s coal-fired power fleet toward the cleanest, most efficient technologies on the market is steadily tightening pollution emissions standards.

China hit an inflection point on air pollution in late 2011. That fall, a series of pollution crises highlighted the fact that Beijing’s public air quality reporting system—which measured air quality based on the number of “blue sky days”23 achieved per year, some of which looked decidedly gray to citizen observers—did not provide Chinese citizens with accurate information about local air quality.24 Chinese citizens demanded more accurate information—particularly on small-particulate pollution, or PM 2.5, which the Chinese government was refusing to share—and refused to back down.25 Facing a rising political crisis, Chinese leaders shifted their strategy.26 Instead of continuing to hide air quality information from its citizens to give polluters more leeway to pursue breakneck growth, Beijing flipped the script by going public with the nation’s pollution data and using citizen anger as a lever to force polluters to comply with the nation’s environmental regulations.27 As part of that broader strategy, Beijing rolled out a new air quality monitoring system that now provides real-time information on air quality across the nation.28

Prior to this shift, Chinese citizens knew the air was bad but did not have the scientific information they needed to tie air quality to specific health effects. Today, Chinese citizens assess local PM 2.5 levels throughout the day and know what those particulates are doing to their children.29 For the Chinese Communist Party, there is no going back—this is now a political survival issue, and recent regulatory trends reflect that.

Starting in 2014,30 China rolled out new air pollution emissions standards for new and existing coal-fired power plants that are stronger than the comparable standards from the European Union and the United States. When visiting coal facilities in China, CAP found that some coal-fired power facilities display real-time emissions levels for these key local air pollutants on large billboards outside the main gate, particularly the cleaner plants that want to advertise their technical superiority.

Currently, Beijing is primarily concerned with tightening emissions standards for conventional air pollution, since that is the primary concern of the Chinese public. The next round of regulatory tightening will target carbon dioxide.

Beijing is already moving to address carbon pollution by rolling out strict new standards for plant efficiency. These standards force Chinese plants to reduce the amount of coal consumed—and thus the amount of carbon emitted—per unit of power produced. By 2020, all coal-fired units nationwide must achieve the following efficiency standards or shut down: 300 gce per kilowatt-hour for all new plants and 310 gce per kilowatt-hour for all existing plants.31 No plant on the U.S. top 100 list can currently meet these efficiency standards. The United States currently does not have any enforceable federal emissions standards for carbon pollution from power plants, and the Trump administration is in the process of reviewing—and potentially weakening or nullifying—the Obama-era carbon emissions standards for new and existing power plants.32

If current U.S. regulatory trends continue, by 2020, every coal plant operating in the United States would be illegal to operate in China.

Conclusion

The United States has a broader array of energy options than China does. However, China is innovating and investing heavily in what it has, and some of the transformations it is achieving already are truly impressive.

China’s leaders have made a strategic choice about the direction of the country: They are aiming to shift from an economy based on heavy, polluting industries to one driven by technology and innovation. The political will for this upgrade has roots in both international geostrategic ambitions and domestic popular grievances about lagging standards of living—and it is beginning to bear fruit. In the process, however, vested interests and technical stumbling blocks have wasted resources and acted as a ballast against Chinese progress. China has the potential to do much more, and the international community should push it to achieve that potential.

For the United States, the signal should be clear: We cannot compete with China on coal-fired power, nor should we aspire to do so. Mimicking China’s development path with regards to intensive coal development would ignore economic reality and the United States’ competitive advantages in the electricity sector and beyond.

Read the full article at https://www.americanprogress.org/is...32141/everything-think-know-coal-china-wrong/
 
Everything You Think You Know About Coal in China Is Wrong
By Melanie Hart, Luke Bassett, and Blaine Johnson Posted on May 15, 2017, 12:01 am

View attachment 399633
AP/Mark Schiefelbein
A worker watches as a conveyor loads coal onto a trailer truck at a coal mine near Ordos in northern China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, November 2015.


See also: “Research Note on U.S. and Chinese Coal-Fired Power Data” by Melanie Hart, Luke Bassett, and Blaine Johnson

China’s energy markets send mixed signals about the nation’s policy intentions and emissions trajectory. Renewable energy analysts tend to focus on China’s massive renewable expansion and view the nation as a global clean energy leader; coal proponents and climate skeptics are more likely to focus on the number of coal plants in China—both in operation and under construction—and claim its climate rhetoric is more flash than substance.

In December 2016, the Center for American Progress brought a group of energy experts to China to find out what is really happening. We visited multiple coal facilities—including a coal-to-liquids plant—and went nearly 200 meters down one of China’s largest coal mines to interview engineers, plant managers, and local government officials working at the front lines of coal in China.

We found that the nation’s coal sector is undergoing a massive transformation that extends from the mines to the power plants, from Ordos to Shanghai. China is indeed going green. The nation is on track to overdeliver on the emissions reduction commitments it put forward under the Paris climate agreement, and making coal cleaner is an integral part of the process.

From a climate perspective, the ideal scenario would be for China to shut down all of its coal-fired power plants and switch over to clean energy full stop. In reality, China’s energy economy is a massive ship that cannot turn on a dime. The shift toward renewables is happening: China’s Paris commitment includes a promise to install 800 gigawatts to 1,000 gigawatts of new renewable capacity by 2030, an amount equivalent to the capacity of the entire U.S. electricity system.1 While China and the United States have roughly the same land mass, however, China has 1.3 billion people to the United States’ 325 million.2 It needs an electricity system that is much larger, so adding the renewable equivalent of one entire U.S. electricity system is not enough to replace coal in the near to medium term. To bridge the gap, China is rolling out new technologies to drastically reduce local air pollution and climate emissions from the nation’s remaining coal plants.

This issue brief covers three things American observers need to understand about coal in China:
  1. China’s new coal-fired power plants are cleaner than anything operating in the United States.
  2. China’s emissions standards for conventional air pollutants from coal-fired power plants are stricter than the comparable U.S. standards.
  3. Demand for coal-fired power is falling so quickly in China that the nation cannot support its existing fleet. Many of the coal-fired power plants that skeptics point to as evidence against a Chinese energy transformation are actually white elephants that Chinese leaders are already targeting in a wave of forced plant closures.
Energy solutions that work well for China will not necessarily work well for the United States. In addition to the massive population disparity, the United States has access to cheap and plentiful shale gas, and China does not. If China is going to reduce emissions substantially, more efficient coal generation has to be part of its equation, at least for the near to medium term. In the United States, investing in next-generation clean coal plants is not a good solution because natural gas is cheap, plentiful, and lower-emitting than all but the most expensive coal-fired power.

Regardless of what works best in the U.S. market, understanding how Beijing is transforming its coal sectors is critical for understanding what to expect from the Chinese energy market going forward and how we should view China’s position in the global effort to combat climate change.

China is greening its coal fleet

Beijing is stuck between a rock and a hard place. On the one hand, China cannot eradicate coal-fired power from its energy mix overnight. China has not yet figured out how to develop its own natural gas supplies—which are more difficult to access and therefore more expensive than those in the United States—and renewable energy expansion takes time. On the other hand, Chinese citizens are demanding cleaner air, and they want immediate improvements. Air quality is now a political priority for the Chinese Communist Party on par with economic growth and corruption. This means that China cannot continue to run the same high-pollution coal plants that were considered acceptable decades ago. Beijing’s solution is to move full speed ahead with renewables while simultaneously investing in what may become the most efficient, least polluting coal fleet the world has ever seen.

Not all coal-fired power is created equal. Emissions and efficiency—the latter being the amount of coal consumed per unit of power produced, which also affects emissions—vary dramatically based on the type of coal and coal-burning technology used. What many U.S. analyses of China’s coal sector overlook is the fact that Beijing has been steadily shutting down the nation’s older, low-efficiency, and high-emissions plants to replace them with new, lower-emitting coal plants that are more efficient that anything operating in the United States.

To better understand where China’s coal fleet is going, CAP compared the top 100 most efficient coal-fired power units in the United States with the top 100 in China. (see Tables A1 and A2) The difference is astounding.

Compared with the Chinese coal fleet, even the best U.S. plants are running older, less efficient technologies. Coal-fired power plants can generally be broken down into three categories:
  1. Subcritical: In these conventional power plants, coal is ignited to boil water, the water creates steam, and the steam rotates a turbine to generate electricity.3 The term “subcritical” indicates that internal steam pressure and temperature do not exceed the critical point of water—705 degrees Fahrenheit and 3,208 pounds per square inch.4
  2. Supercritical: These plants use high-tech materials to achieve internal steam temperatures in the 1,000–1,050 degrees Fahrenheit range and internal pressure levels that are higher than the critical point of water, thus spinning the turbines much faster and generating more electricity with less coal.5
  3. Ultra-supercritical: These plants use additional technology innovations to bring temperatures to more than 1,400 degrees Fahrenheit and pressure levels to more than 5,000 pounds per square inch, thus further improving efficiency.6
The U.S. coal fleet is much older than China’s: The average age of operating U.S. coal plants is 39 years, with 88 percent built between 1950 and 1990.7 Among the top 100 most efficient plants in the United States, the initial operating years range from 1967 to 2012. In China, the oldest plant on the top 100 list was commissioned in 2006, and the youngest was commissioned in 2015.

The United States only has one ultra-supercritical power plant.8 Everything else is subcritical or, at best, supercritical. In contrast, China is retiring its older plants and replacing them with ultra-supercritical facilities that produce more energy with less coal and generate less emissions as well. Out of China’s top 100 units, 90 are ultra-supercritical plants.


When the capacity of each of the top 100 units in each nation is taken into account, ultra-supercritical technology accounts for 92 percent of Chinese top 100 capacity and less than one percent—0.76 percent—of U.S. top 100 capacity. Because the technological makeup of the Chinese plants is different, their emissions levels are different as well. In the United States, the total nameplate capacity of our top 100 most efficient coal-fired power units is 80.1 gigawatts, and their cumulative annual carbon emissions amount to 361,924,475 metric tons.9 Meanwhile, the total nameplate capacity of China’s top 100 units is 82.6 gigawatts, and their cumulative annual carbon emissions are an estimated 342,586,908 metric tons.10 Since China’s fleet uses more advanced technology, it also consumes less coal: an average of 286.42 grams of coal equivalent, or gce, consumed per kilowatt-hour of power produced in China versus 374.96 gce consumed per kilowatt-hour produced at lower heating value in the United States.

To be sure, China still has plenty of older coal-fired power units that are not using the most advanced technology. According to the latest third-party research from S&P Global Platts, which provides research on global energy infrastructure, when the data set is expanded to include all operating coal-fired power capacity in China—which totals 920 gigawatts—approximately 19 percent uses ultra-supercritical technology, 25 percent uses supercritical technology, and 56 percent uses subcritical technology.11 However, the new builds are increasingly ultra-supercritical plants, and Beijing is steadily ratcheting up the emissions requirements and efficiency standards for those older plants as well.

By 2020, every existing coal-fired power unit in China must meet an efficiency standard of 310 gce per kilowatt-hour; any units that do not meet that standard by 2020 will be retired. In contrast, none of the current top 100 most efficient U.S. coal-fired power units would meet that same efficiency standard today. (see Table A2)


The simple fact is that the United States has a wide array of cheap and abundant energy options that now compete with coal-fired electricity generation—particularly shale gas and renewables. Given the additional context of falling U.S. electricity demand and improving efficiency, even U.S. electric utility executives have indicated that their business models are rebalancing toward these options—and away from coal.12 Although higher-tech plants, such as ultra-supercritical plants, have lower operation and maintenance costs than their less efficient counterparts, overnight capital costs are, on average, around 17 percent higher.13 In a market where even the least expensive coal-fired plants are struggling to compete with shale-gas-fired plants, those investments do not make good financial sense.

One thing China’s experience makes very clear is that even if the United States were to invest in newer, more efficient coal plants, it would not be a major jobs generator on par with renewable energy. As China’s power plants are becoming more efficient in their energy consumption and emissions, they are also becoming more efficient in terms of labor. The CAP research team visited the Shanghai Waigaoqiao No. 3 power station. That plant runs two 1,000 megawatt ultra-supercritical units and supports 250 employees.14 In contrast, the nearby Waigaoqiao No. 1 and Shidongkou No. 1 power stations each run four 300 megawatt subcritical units and employ 600 people and 1,000 people, respectively.15

The same thing is happening in China’s coal mines. As the operations become higher tech, they become cleaner and more efficient, and those jobs decrease as well. This is one reason Beijing expects its coal sector to lay off 1.3 million workers from 2016 to 2020.16 Chinese leaders view renewable energy as a much more dependable employment generator; they expect the nation’s renewable sectors to generate 13 million new jobs by 2020.17

China’s energy employment shifts follow a pattern that has been unfolding in the United States for decades. U.S. coal mining employment peaked in the 1920s and then began a long and steady decline. From 1983 to 2014, U.S. coal production increased more than 28 percent, but employment still fell 59 percent.18 This reflects a shift in U.S. coal production from more labor-intensive underground mining in the eastern United States to more highly mechanized and easily accessible surface mining in the west.19 Falling U.S. electricity demand, rising energy efficiency, and sharp price drops for natural gas, solar, and wind compounded U.S. energy employment shifts by reducing utilities’ dependence on and demand for coal.20 At year-end 2016, the United States had a total of 54,030 coal operator employees nationwide.21 In contrast, between 2015 and 2016, the United States added 73,615 new jobs in solar energy generation—a nearly 25 percent year-on-year increase—bringing the total number of U.S. solar energy generation jobs to 373,807 nationwide.22


China’s emissions standards are stronger than ours

One of the levers that Beijing is pulling to move China’s coal-fired power fleet toward the cleanest, most efficient technologies on the market is steadily tightening pollution emissions standards.

China hit an inflection point on air pollution in late 2011. That fall, a series of pollution crises highlighted the fact that Beijing’s public air quality reporting system—which measured air quality based on the number of “blue sky days”23 achieved per year, some of which looked decidedly gray to citizen observers—did not provide Chinese citizens with accurate information about local air quality.24 Chinese citizens demanded more accurate information—particularly on small-particulate pollution, or PM 2.5, which the Chinese government was refusing to share—and refused to back down.25 Facing a rising political crisis, Chinese leaders shifted their strategy.26 Instead of continuing to hide air quality information from its citizens to give polluters more leeway to pursue breakneck growth, Beijing flipped the script by going public with the nation’s pollution data and using citizen anger as a lever to force polluters to comply with the nation’s environmental regulations.27 As part of that broader strategy, Beijing rolled out a new air quality monitoring system that now provides real-time information on air quality across the nation.28

Prior to this shift, Chinese citizens knew the air was bad but did not have the scientific information they needed to tie air quality to specific health effects. Today, Chinese citizens assess local PM 2.5 levels throughout the day and know what those particulates are doing to their children.29 For the Chinese Communist Party, there is no going back—this is now a political survival issue, and recent regulatory trends reflect that.

Starting in 2014,30 China rolled out new air pollution emissions standards for new and existing coal-fired power plants that are stronger than the comparable standards from the European Union and the United States. When visiting coal facilities in China, CAP found that some coal-fired power facilities display real-time emissions levels for these key local air pollutants on large billboards outside the main gate, particularly the cleaner plants that want to advertise their technical superiority.

Currently, Beijing is primarily concerned with tightening emissions standards for conventional air pollution, since that is the primary concern of the Chinese public. The next round of regulatory tightening will target carbon dioxide.

Beijing is already moving to address carbon pollution by rolling out strict new standards for plant efficiency. These standards force Chinese plants to reduce the amount of coal consumed—and thus the amount of carbon emitted—per unit of power produced. By 2020, all coal-fired units nationwide must achieve the following efficiency standards or shut down: 300 gce per kilowatt-hour for all new plants and 310 gce per kilowatt-hour for all existing plants.31 No plant on the U.S. top 100 list can currently meet these efficiency standards. The United States currently does not have any enforceable federal emissions standards for carbon pollution from power plants, and the Trump administration is in the process of reviewing—and potentially weakening or nullifying—the Obama-era carbon emissions standards for new and existing power plants.32

If current U.S. regulatory trends continue, by 2020, every coal plant operating in the United States would be illegal to operate in China.

Conclusion

The United States has a broader array of energy options than China does. However, China is innovating and investing heavily in what it has, and some of the transformations it is achieving already are truly impressive.

China’s leaders have made a strategic choice about the direction of the country: They are aiming to shift from an economy based on heavy, polluting industries to one driven by technology and innovation. The political will for this upgrade has roots in both international geostrategic ambitions and domestic popular grievances about lagging standards of living—and it is beginning to bear fruit. In the process, however, vested interests and technical stumbling blocks have wasted resources and acted as a ballast against Chinese progress. China has the potential to do much more, and the international community should push it to achieve that potential.

For the United States, the signal should be clear: We cannot compete with China on coal-fired power, nor should we aspire to do so. Mimicking China’s development path with regards to intensive coal development would ignore economic reality and the United States’ competitive advantages in the electricity sector and beyond.

Read the full article at https://www.americanprogress.org/is...32141/everything-think-know-coal-china-wrong/
:china:
 
Beijing is firmly on Paris Accord, progressively decommission old coal capacities. With advanced technology, modern coal plants are way more efficient and environmentally friendly. Results are self-explanatory, share of coal in total energy consumption mix fell to 62% last year (2016) from 64% the year before, consumption of coal fell even faster, fell by 4.7% last year (2016), third year in a row.

chinacoal-web-fig1-520-png.399630

https://apnews.com/a55827924d944698ae0cbb28af5aeb4e/chinas-coal-consumption-falls-3rd-year-row
http://www.climatechangenews.com/20...ll-again-in-2016-solar-capacity-increased-82/
 
But why I can't see the stars in the night in Tokyo?Some people say Tokyo is still polluted.

Because of ambient light. Major cities like Tokyo have a huge amount of lighting even in the dead of night. This makes viewing stars extremely difficult.
 
Is this profitable when oil is so cheap?

Technically, this has been possible for years, what stops it is the price of oil. Ultimately the right conditions are financial and not technical.

I can't see this industry succeeding without some form of government support.
 
Pipe desalinated water from nuclear reactor desalination plants

The US government organizations will always use a misleading definition to show that China is energy poor. That is not true with today's technology. China has indigenous CPR-1000 nuclear reactors (Chinese PWR) and pipeline technology.

As the Circle of Blue article shows, desalinated water will be pumped from the Bohai Sea inland. Sea water is not used. Nuclear power plants are excellent desalinators.

Infographic: Bohai Pipeline Map — Coal Reserves vs. Water Resources in Northern China | Circle of Blue WaterNews
RwRDEtY.jpg
Why not pump water from the east line of the south-north water transfer project? It even doesn't need the desalination process.
 
In contrast, China is retiring its older plants and replacing them with ultra-supercritical facilities that produce more energy with less coal and generate less emissions as well. Out of China’s top 100 units, 90 are ultra-supercritical plants.
A bit of background about China's over-a-decade long development of ultra-supercritical technology, spearheaded by Harbin Boiler Corp and Shanghai Electric Group:

Yuhuan 1,000MW Ultra-Supercritical Pressure Boilers, China

Untitled.png

All four 1,000MW coal-fired ultra-supercritical pressure boilers at Yuhuan in China have come online. Located on the coast of East China's Zhejiang Province, the last unit began commercial operation in November 2007. The plant cost ¥9.6bn (€900m), and the units run at about 45% efficiency. Yuhuan has China's first 1,000MW ultra-supercritical pressure boilers. Units 1 and 2 went on line in 2006. The site is now generating 22 billion kWh of electricity a year. The plant is operated by China Huaneng Group, China's largest power producer. "It is claimed that Yuhuan Units 1 and 2 are the world's cleanest, most efficient and most advanced ultra-supercritical units.".

Ultra-supercritical pressure boilers

Supercritical operation of large thermal baseload power plants during the 1980s used steam temperatures of typically 550ºC, leading to around 40% thermal efficiencies. Ultra-supercritical steam conditions now use supercritical pressures up to 300bar, with 600°C steam and reheat steam temperatures. This gives a net efficiency of 46%.

Siemens reports that just a 1% gain in efficiency for a typical 700MW plant can reduce 30-year lifetime emissions by 2,000t NOx, 2,000t SO2, 500t particulates and 2.5 million tons CO2.

"It is claimed that Yuhuan Units 1 and 2 are the world's cleanest, most efficient and most advanced ultra-supercritical units."

New units also incorporate high-efficiency dust removal and desulphurisation. This has led to the claim that Yuhuan Units 1 and 2 are the world's cleanest, most efficient and most advanced ultra-supercritical units.

2-ultra-supercritical.jpg

The MHI (Mitsubishi Heavy Industries) boilers have a main steam pressure of 27.5MPa, a main steam temperature of 605°C and a reheat steam temperature of 603°C. The boilers were made and commissioned collaboratively by MHI in Japan, who provided the designs and key products, and Harbin Boiler Co. (HBC) in China. Unit 4 was constructed by MHI and HBC. MHI plans to supply above 12GW of boilers to China under the HBC collaboration.

Siemens is supplying four 1,000MW ultra-supercritical steam turbines. These use a tandem compound, four-cylinder arrangement. Steam enters the high-pressure turbine through two main steam valves, with exhaust steam being reheated and fed to a double-flow intermediate-pressure turbine. From there, it goes to two low-pressure turbines. The steam turbines at the Yuhuan power plant were jointly designed and manufactured by Shanghai Electric Group and Siemens Power Generation Group.

China building ultra-supercritical industry

About 70% of China's total energy consumption comes from coal, and the country still has huge reserves. Burning it, however, has severely damaged the environment, Chinese people themselves and people in surrounding countries. In northern China, cities like Beijing and Shenyang have some of the highest readings for total suspended particulates and SO2 in the world, with coal burning being a major source of this. In southern China, large areas have growing acid rain problems.

"Because of its reserves, China continues to rely on coal and is using advanced technologies to reduce pollutants."

China does have extensive unexploited reserves of natural gas. Gas power stations are more efficient and cleaner than coal stations, but some industry observers are saying that using gas for power production is wasting an inherently clean form of energy.

Because of its reserves, China continues to rely on coal and is using advanced technologies to reduce pollutants. China is now building around ten similar coal-fired plants using different international manufacturers, and amassing its own design and construction expertise.


http://www.power-technology.com/projects/yuhuancoal/
 
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