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Posts Tagged ‘coal’

Thar Coal Power Project: Sindh, Engro Sign Agreement for Power Generation

September 9th, 2009

According to the agreement, a company called ” Sindh Engro Coal Mining Company” will be incorporated with initial sufficient capital to complete the detailed feasibility study for Thar coal power project in Sindh. The project feasibility will be completed in 18 months.

Sindh government and Engro Power Generation Limited on Tuesday signed an agreement for mining and generating 600-1000 megawatts power from Thar Coal fields on public-private-partnership basis. The agreement was signed by Aijaz Ali Khan, Secretary Mines and Mineral Development on behalf of Sindh Government and Asad Umer, CEO Engro Ltd and Khalid Mansoor, CEO Engro Power Generation.

Under the agreement Sindh Government will make 40 percent and Engro will make 60 percent investment. The project envisages 600 to 1000 MW electricity and 2 percent of the profit would be spent on the welfare of local population.

Via Business Recorder.

Investment, Pakistan, power

Hope for FutureGen and Clean Coal

March 31st, 2009

A good summary article on what is happening to the coal and green industry in US, courtsey of Technology Review.

Plans to build a power plant featuring integrated gasification combined cycle (IGCC) technology and carbon capture and storage (CCS) hit a wall in January 2008 when the Bush administration withdrew support, citing cost overruns. Those concerns have since been exposed as an artifact of specious financial accounting that overestimated the cost of the plant by $500 million.

Those involved say that FutureGen may now be far more politically palatable and expedient. With five years of development already completed, they say that FutureGen is positioned to quickly advance two of the Obama administration’s top goals: economic stimulus and reduction of carbon emissions. “You have a project here that is shovel ready, and with the advancement of technology and importance of CCS, it’s very worthy of a large government infusion,” says Nick Akins, executive vice president for generation at utility giant American Electric Power (AEP), a member of the FutureGen Alliance.

FutureGen remains attractive because IGCC plants that capture and sequester CO2 are expected to offer one of the cheapest ways to achieve carbon-neutral power generation by 2020. Generating a megawatt-hour of power with CCS-equipped IGCC would cost $99 to $119 in 2020, according to European Commission cost estimates released this winter. That beats their estimates for the price of power from conventional coal plants with CCS, natural-gas generators with added CCS, and solar thermal power. (The cost of generating power from offshore wind farms was harder to predict, with estimates ranging from $86 to $152 per megawatt-hour.)

Clean Technology, Energy, Green