March-April 2008

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Fuel of the Future

Can power-plant emissions offer an alternative to fossil fuels?

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By Dan Rafter

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Potential. That’s the word Raymond Hobbs, senior consulting engineer with Arizona Public Service Company, the largest public utility in Arizona, uses when describing the generated-energy project currently running at the Redhawk Power Plant near Phoenix.

The project—which uses carbon-dioxide emissions and algae fields to produce enough onsite energy to power a van used by employees of the power plant—has attracted the attention of the energy community. Platts, a provider of news, analytical services, and conferences centering on the energy and metal industries, late last year honored both Arizona Public Service Co. and Cambridge, MA–based GreenFuel Technologies Corp., the developer that has partnered with the utility on the project, with one of its most prestigious awards.

Under the project, which started in 2005 and continues today, Arizona Public Service Co. is trapping the carbon-dioxide emissions from its Redhawk Power Plant, located about 50 miles west of Phoenix. Workers are then transferring the emissions to a nearby greenhouse-type structure filled with containers of naturally occurring algae. Workers harvest the algae, once enough of it has grown after it consumes the plant’s carbon dioxide, and turn its starches into ethanol and its lipids into biodiesel. These fuels power a Ford E-350 passenger van that ferries employees across the power plant.

Hobbs, though, sees even greater potential. He sees a future where carbon-dioxide emissions from power plants, such as Redhawk, are used to provide much-needed relief from the US’s reliance on other fossil fuels.

“If this proves out, if this in the long run proves to be economically feasible, the carbon-dioxide emissions just from power plants alone can be an enormous source of fuel,” Hobbs says. “You can take the amount of Btus going into power plants from fossil fuels, and move that carbon into the fuel of your choice. It would have a huge impact if this was something we could do on a large scale.”

It’s little wonder that Hobbs, and other observers, are excited about the Redhawk project. The emissions-to-biofuels project addresses two important issues that the US now faces: If replicated on a large-scale basis, the project would be one way to reduce greenhouse-gas emissions at power plants. It would also produce more domestic sources of alternative fuels for automobiles and power plants.

Officials with GreenFuel Technologies, a developer of systems used to recycle carbon-dioxide streams from power and manufacturing plant flue gases to produce biofuels, refer to the vast potential of the experiment when they say it is, theoretically, the first step in creating a self-sustaining renewable energy system for producing electricity.

The relatively small project at Redhawk, of course, would have to be expanded significantly to achieve this far-from-modest goal. But officials with GreenFuel say that they are committed to helping power and manufacturing plants take the steps necessary to get closer to this goal.

“The Redhawk project marks the first time ever that algae biomass, created onsite by direct connection to a commercial power plant, has been successfully converted to both transportation-grade biodiesel and ethanol,” says Cary Bullock, chief executive officer of GreenFuel.

An Economic Decision
Isaac Berzin, chief technology officer of GreenFuel Technologies Corp., knows all about the potential that algae has for generating biofuels. He’s the one who’s primarily responsible for GreenFuel’s patented approach to propagating algae on an industrial scale.

It was due in large part to him, then, that Arizona Public Service Co. decided to turn its algae into biodiesel ethanol, a liquid fuel, rather than a type of biogas. It’s far less costly to create liquid biofuels than it is to create their gaseous counterparts, Berzin says.

“If you compare the dollars to pounds on an economic matrix, you’ll see quite clearly that creating liquid biofuel is far more efficient and cost-effective,” Berzin says. “It’s more difficult to do it cheaply enough if you’re aiming for biogas.”

The project uses GreenFuel’s Emissions-to-Biofuels algae bioreactor system connected to Arizona Public Service’s 1,040-MW Redhawk power plant located in Arlington, AZ. This process allows GreenFuel to create a carbon-rich algal biomass, that has enough quality and concentration of oils and starch content, to be easily converted into transportation-grade biodiesel and ethanol.

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This is not the only time GreenFuel has tackled such a project. The company’s Emissions-to-Biofuels technology relies on naturally occurring algae to recycle carbon dioxide from the stack gases of power plants and other commercial sources of continuous carbon dioxide emissions.

The Redhawk plant features specially designed pipes that capture and transport the carbon-dioxide emissions. Workers then transfer this gas to containers holding hungry algae. Like all plants, algae divide and grow through photosynthesis. When sunlight is present, the algae consume carbon dioxide. Officials with GreenFuel estimate that, through this process, algae can consume as much as 80% of carbon-dioxide emissions during the daytime hours at a typical natural-gas-fired power plant. Next Page >

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What Do You Think?

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trendseeker

December 2nd, 2008 10:23 AM PT

Absurd - if he had ever worked in a power plant he would realize that the volumes of gas involved are prodigious and well beyond what could be dealt with economically

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