New West Energy Grok

Can Smokestack Recyclers Save the Climate?


By Richard Martin, 12-01-06

 
 

Technology -- specifically the internal combustion engine -- got us into the climate-change predicament we find ourselves in. Can technology save us?

The answer is a qualified yes, if you judge by the announcement on Thursday that GreenFuel Technologies Corp. has successfully recycled greenhouse gases from an Arizona power plant into "transportation-grade" biodiesel and ethanol. Speaking at the annual Platts Global energy Awards in New York, officials from Arizona Public Service and GreenFuel Technologies said that an algae bioreactor system connected to the smokestack of the 1040-megawatt natural-gas plant at Redhawk, near Phoenix, can recycle the CO2 in the waste gas into usable fuels. "Economically efficient" fuels are, for the moment, another matter; but this is potentially an enormous breakthrough of the kind we're going to need to forestall catastrophic climate change over the next two decades.

For a primer on how the system works, see Smart Economy.

In other energy news:

-- Aspen Skiing Co. has joined a coalition of states, environmental groups and others alarmed by climate change to urge the U.S. Supreme Court to force the Bush Administration into taking action on global warming. The suit, labeled Massachusetts v. Environmental Protection Agency, is the subject of an incisive story on Slate by Dahlia Lithwick. That's right: we are now in the position of suing our own EPA to get it to, uhh, protect the environment.

-- Saying that purchasing "green" power is not enough, a group called Ski Area Citizens Coalition has given credit to Vail Resorts for planning to buy all its electricity from wind generators, but notes that development work at Blue Sky Basin, which opened in 2000, negates the gains from Vail's move to wind power.

-- The inevitable backlash against the energy boom on the Western Slope has set in. Testifying at a congressional field hearing last summer, Mesa County Commissioner Craig Meis said Western Colorado would "do its part" to help satisfy U.S. domestic energy needs but will not stand for the region becoming a "national sacrifice area." Coal production in Western Colorado, meanwhile, is actually down this year, and San Miguel County commissioners have supported a petition that demands an increase in the environmental bond that mining companies would have to post before drilling a gas well. San Miguel County is the first governmental entity to support the measure.

-- Finally, a new study by the Bureau of Land Management -- officially ordered by Congress, at the behest of the energy industry -- has found that up to half the oil and more than a quarter of the natural gas on 99 million acres of federal land is off limits to drilling because of significant environmental and other restrictions. The new study contradicts earlier reports that found that far higher percentages of fossil fuels are available for extraction from federal lands in the West.



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Comments

By Craig Moore, 12-01-06
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