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November 21, 2002

Abraham Announces Plans to Expand DOE's Carbon Sequestration Research
Regional Partnerships, Ohio River Valley Project To Study Ways to Capture, Store Carbon Gases
Washington, DC
- Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham, speaking today to the National Coal
Council, announced that the Department of Energy will move into a new, expanded
phase of its program to develop "carbon sequestration," a promising area
of research in which carbon emissions are captured and permanently stored
rather than being released to the atmosphere.

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Full Text
of Secretary Abraham's remarks to the Coal Council
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Secretary
Abraham said that the federal government intends to create a nationwide network
of four to ten "regional sequestration partnerships." He called on industry,
state and local agencies, universities, and others to join with the Energy
Department in forming the partnerships.
"These
regionally-focused efforts will become the centerpiece of our sequestration
program. They will help us determine the technologies, regulations, and
infrastructure that are best suited for specific regions of the country,"
Abraham said.
Secretary
Abraham also announced that the Energy Department has given the go-ahead
to a research team headed by American Electric Power (AEP) and Battelle to
begin studying potential sequestration sites in the Ohio River Valley where
carbon emissions from power plants might be injected deep underground instead
of being released into the atmosphere.
"The
focus will be on the deep saline formations that lie thousands of feet below
the surface -- well below the aquifers commonly used for drinking water,"
Secretary Abraham said. "Theoretically, they could hold all of the carbon
dioxide emitted by the nation's coal-burning power plants for the next 100
years. But we will move deliberately, because we want to go as far and as
fast as the science takes us."
President
Bush and others have singled out carbon sequestration as one of the most
promising new approaches for countering the threat of global climate change.
In one of his first major addresses on climate change, on June 11, 2001,
the President said, "We all believe technology offers great promise to significantly
reduce emissions – especially carbon capture, storage and sequestration technologies."
Secretary
Abraham said that the Energy Department will issue a solicitation notice
later this month asking industry, state and local agencies, universities
and others to begin forming the regional partnerships.
The
government will offer up to $2 million per partnership for initial planning
efforts. Later, as much as $7 million per partnership could be provided
for actual field verification tests and more detailed regulatory and infrastructure
planning. The first partnerships are expected to be announced next spring.
The
AEP/Battelle project will focus on one type of sequestration – the injection
of carbon gases into brine-filled formations thousands of feet underground.
Theoretically, these deep saline formations, which underlie all or part of
35 states, could hold all of the carbon dioxide emitted from the nation's
coal-burning power plants. The brackish water in these rock formations is
far too salty for human consumption, and they exist well below drinking water
aquifers.
Researchers
will study whether the deep saline formations beneath the Ohio-West Virginia
border are suitable for permanently entrapping large quantities of carbon
dioxide. The study is especially important because it takes place in the
heart of the largest concentration of fossil fuel power plants in the nation.
AEP has volunteered its Mountaineer Plant in New Haven, W.Va., as the test
site for investigating the concept.
During
the next 18 months, researchers will conduct seismic surveys of the underground
rock formations and drill a 10,000-foot exploratory well on the power plant
property. No decision will be made on proceeding beyond the current study
phase until the subsurface geology is deemed safe and suitable for carbon
sequestration and cost estimates have been prepared.
The
Department, through its National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL), is
providing $3.2 million of the project's total $4.2 million cost. Other partners
providing financial and in-kind support include AEP, BP, Battelle, and Schlumberger.
The Ohio Coal Development Office, part of Ohio's Department of Development,
is also supporting the project. Technical support to the project will be
provided by experts from NETL, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, West
Virginia University, the Ohio Division of Geological Survey, The Ohio State
University, and others.
- End of Techline
For more information, contact:
News Media: Drew Malcomb, DOE Office of Public Affairs, 202/586-5806
General Information: Robert C. Porter, DOE Office of Fossil Energy, 202/586-6503
Technical Information: Scott Klara, DOE National Energy Technology Laboratory, 412/386-4864
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