Archive for March, 2010

EPA proposes oil and gas to report emissions

Sunday, March 28th, 2010

Late last year at the Global Refining Strategies Summit in Houston,  major industry executives talked about new Washington rules on CO2 emissions not in terms of “if,” but “when.”  If you aren’t in the oil and gas business and blinked during the last three weeks during the healthcare battle on Capitol Hill, you might have missed the news:

March 4, 2010 WASHINGTON – The Environmental Protection Agency intends to require that power plants, refineries and other major sources of global-warming pollution get permits beginning in 2011 that would require them to cut emissions, the agency’s leader said Wednesday.

EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson said the EPA wants to regulate sources emitting more than 75,000 tons a year of polluting gaseous oxides (CO2, etc.) over the next three years.  Exactly how the EPA intends to monitor and regulate these emissions is the singular issue not lost on the environmental and industry lobbies in D.C.  Get ready for a knock-down drag out over what the country’s enviro-political landscape will or should look like for years to come.

EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson

EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson

But stepping back, here’s what the EPA has done: it has proposed that oil, gas and other entities that emit CO2 and related pollutants be added to an existing list of companies that report their emissions levels yearly.  One pollutant cited by the EPA is methane, a gas generated by the petroleum industry that traps 20 percent more heat than carbon and is considered a major factor in climate change.  Another area the EPA is interested in is CO2 injection or “flooding” – a method used by producers to push oil out of the ground.

“Gathering this information is the first step toward reducing greenhouse emissions and fostering innovative technologies for the clean energy future,” said Jackson.

The industries cited will be asked to begin recording their emissions for a report submitted in 2012.

Research & Development

SWAPSOL Sulfur Cycle

SWAPSOL Sulfur Cycle

Swapsol Corp. may have a potential solution that may make the worry over CO2 emissions a thing of the past.

SWAPSOL is developing commercial processes around a newly discovered chemical reaction verified to reduce hydrogen sulfide (H2S) below detectable levels while reacting with carbon dioxide (CO2) to form water, sulfur and carsuls, a carbon-sulfur polymer.

The Stenger-Wasas Process (SWAP) stands to fundamentally simplify sulfur removal technology as it consumes carbon dioxide in an exothermic reaction under relatively mild process conditions.

SWAPSOL will again present its science to the international oil and gas industry at the Global Refining Summit May 17-19  in Rotterdam.  It returns to Houston October 26-27 to meet with industry at the Global Refining Strategies Summit.

SWAP to clean flue gas, Claus tail gas, destroy CO2

Wednesday, March 17th, 2010

“Clean coal technology” describes a new generation of energy processes that sharply reduce air emissions and other pollutants from coal-burning power plants.” – from the U.S. Dept. of Energy’s “Clean Coal Technology & Clean Power Initiative” web page.

Coal-fired power plant

Coal-fired power plant

What happens to gas generated by coal-fired power plants?  It exits the plant up the smokestack and is called “flue gas.”  What if there were a way to clean flue gas and lessen the need to capture and bury CO2?

There is a dearth of news on efforts to make coal “clean,” by capturing the gas and storing it underground.  Swapsol is in the late stages of laboratory development and is seeking industrial partners to commercialize a technology that alters preconceived notions about chemistry and energy.

The Stenger-Wasas Process (SWAP) is capable of reducing all existing gaseous oxides and other reactive components in gases including NOx, SOx, O3, COS, CS2, CO, H2S, CO2 and mercaptans.  The elimination of refinery flue gas may have the single biggest impact on industry savings and climate change. Refining operations already have sulfur plants and gas streams containing H2S, thereby increasing the feasibility of integrating the SWAP technology.

The SWAP also has important applications for Claus tail gas cleanup.  Refineries requiring additional H2S may generate requisite amounts on-site using the SWAP Sulfur Cycle which reacts any waste hydrocarbon with sulfur to form H2S and carsuls, a carbon-sulfur polymer.

For more information on the SWAP, please visit http://www.swapsol.com . The next presentation will be held May 19 at the Global Refining Summit/Rotterdam http://www.refiningsummit.com