English
 
Privacy Policy Disclaimer
  Advanced SearchBrowse

Item

ITEM ACTIONSEXPORT

Released

Book Chapter

Killing two birds with one stone: a negative emissions strategy for a soft landing of the US coal sector

Authors

Patrizio,  Piera
External Organizations;

Leduc,  Sylvain

Kraxner,  Florian

Fuss,  Sabine

Kindermann,  Georg

Spokas,  Kasparas

Wetterlund,  Elisabeth

Lundgren,  Joakim

Yowargana,  Ping

Obersteiner,  Michael

External Ressource
No external resources are shared
Fulltext (public)
There are no public fulltexts stored in PIKpublic
Supplementary Material (public)
There is no public supplementary material available
Citation

Patrizio, P., Leduc, S., Kraxner, F., Fuss, S., Kindermann, G., Spokas, K., Wetterlund, E., Lundgren, J., Yowargana, P., Obersteiner, M. (2019): Killing two birds with one stone: a negative emissions strategy for a soft landing of the US coal sector. - In: Magalhães Pires, J. C., Cunha Gonçalves, A. L. D. (Eds.), Bioenergy with Carbon Capture and Storage, London : Academic Press, 219-236.
https://doi.org/10.1016/B978-0-12-816229-3.00011-9


Cite as: https://publications.pik-potsdam.de/pubman/item/item_31384
Abstract
In a modeling study, optimizing the transformation of the US coal sector to achieve emissions reductions consistent with the 2°C target, we include all current coal-fired power plants of the US fleet, a large part of which will need to be replaced due to their high age. Coal-fired power plants can either be (1) replaced by higher efficiency coal plants or (2) natural gas plants while units are not yet at the end of their lifetime and can be (3) retrofitted with carbon capture and storage (CCS) or (4) retrofitted to cofire coal and biomass coupled with CCS (BECCS) thereby achieving negative emissions. Our results show that if the 2°C emissions mitigation target should be achieved, the cost-optimal way of doing so is through an early implementation of BECCS. This strategy also helps to address the US Administrations’ concern for coal workers: there is a more gradual phaseout of coal, which allows to retain 40,000 jobs that would be loss due to the fleet retirement for aging. In addition, 22,000 new workers would be permanently employed in the coal sector by the end of midcentury, especially in areas where the deployments of BECCS would start already by 2030. Our modeling results indicate the Great Lakes area and the southeast United States as the greatest winners of this negative emissions strategy. If planned in an integrated and forward-looking way, climate change mitigation can boost employment and competitiveness.