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President Requests $863 Million for Fossil Energy Programs

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Category: Energy
Type: News
Source: NETL
Date: Monday, February 5th, 2007


FY2008 Fossil Budget Request One of Biggest Since Taking Office

WASHINGTON, DC - President Bush's FY2008 budget looks for a 33 percent increase for the Office of Fossil Energy over last year's request to support improved energy security and rapid development of climate-oriented technology. It totals $863 million and completes a promise to invest $2 billion in coal technologies 3 years early.

One of the President's Biggest Fossil Energy budgets, the new suggestion emphasizes early initiation of an expansion of the Strategic Petroleum Reserve; accelerating the development of technologies to manage and virtually eliminate emissions of the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide from fossil fuel use in power generation and other industrial activity; and moving forward with the design and early work on the FutureGen plan to combine in one plant the production of electric power and hydrogen fuel from coal with near-zero atmospheric emissions.

Fossil Energy's programs support the President's top initiatives for energy security, clean air, climate change and coal research. Fossil Energy also supports the D.O.E.'s strategic goal of protecting our countrywide and economic security by promoting a diverse supply and delivery of reliable, affordable, and environmentally-sound energy.

Specifically, FY 2008 Fossil Energy programs:

  • Manage and perform energy-related research that reduces market barriers to the reliable, efficient, and environmentally sound use of fossil fuels for power generation and conversion to other fuels such as hydrogen;
  • Partner with industry and others to advance clean and efficient fossil energy technologies toward commercialization, and;
  • Double the current capacity of the Strategic Petroleum Reserve to 1.5 billion barrels by 2027 - an insurance policy in the event of a severe supply disruption.

FOSSIL RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT
The goal of the President's Coal Research Initiative is to research, develop and demonstrate technologies that will enhance the competitiveness and utility of domestic coal in future energy markets. Coal represents in excess of 90 percent of our Nation's fossil energy reserves, and the Administration strongly supports it as an important component of a balanced countrywide energy portfolio. As a candidate in 2000, the President pledged to invest $2 billion over ten years in developing technologies for its expanded, environmentally responsible use. The current request fulfills the promise.

Because of its importance, the President's FY 2008 Budget requests $426 million for the Clean Coal Technology Plan distributed over the program's various components to get the maximum benefit in the most cost-effective way.

Clean Coal Power Initiative
Clean Coal is a major component of the Countrywide Energy Policy. It is essential to meeting the rising demand for clean, reliable and affordable electricity for the foreseeable future. Clean coal R&D is a cooperative, cost-shared Plan between the government and industry to rapidly demonstrate emerging technologies in coal-based power generation to help accelerate their commercialization.

The Clean Coal Power Initiative's suggested budget of $73 million will fund the continuation of plans selected in 2 prior, competitive solicitations for promising technologies. A 3rd round is planned in FY 2008.

FutureGen
Within the President's Coal Research Initiative, the FutureGen plan will gain a two-fold backing increase in the FY 2008 budget from FY 2007 -- 6 times the amount from FY 2006. FutureGen will establish the capability and feasibility of co-producing electricity and hydrogen from coal and includes carbon sequestration as a key component of the project. The plan is now in the location selection phase and will employ a public/private partnership to demonstrate technology ultimately leading to near-zero atmospheric emission plants (including carbon) that are fuel-flexible and capable of multi-product output and electrical efficiencies of over 60 percent.

Fossil Energy's most far-reaching and visionary clean coal plan has a suggested FY 2008 Budget of $108 million. Those funds will be used to support detailed plant design and procurement, as well as ongoing permitting, preliminary design and location characterization work.

The plan will help retain the strategic value of coal - our most abundant and lowest cost domestic energy resource. The clean coal R&D effort will focus research efforts on all the key ingredients necessary for FutureGen - carbon sequestration, membrane technologies for oxygen and hydrogen separation, advanced turbines, fuel cells, coal-to-hydrogen conversion gasifier related technologies, and other technologies.

Some Clean Coal Power Initiative activities complement FutureGen and will decrease the costs of Integrated Gasification Combined Cycle systems and other technologies for near-zero atmospheric emission plants.

Fuel and Power Systems
The Fuels and Power Systems suggested FY08 Budget is $245 million and covers R&D for several technologies important to FutureGen:
  • Sequestration
    One of those critical technology areas - and a core Fossil Energy Plan receiving heavy emphasis - is carbon sequestration. It is one of the key ingredients of the Fuel and Power Systems Plan and gains an increase in budget dollars to $79 million in FY 2008. The FY08 request will allow continued R&D into CO2 capture and storage, as well as measurement, monitoring and verification technologies and processes. The Plan will focus primarily on developing capture and separation technologies that dramatically lower the costs and energy requirements for reducing carbon dioxide emissions from fossil based (especially coal) energy plants.

    Technology developments within the carbon sequestration Plan are expected to contribute substantially to the President's goal of reducing greenhouse gas intensity by 18 percent by 2012. The Countrywide network of regional partnerships will continue its important work in FY 2008. This Secretarial partnership initiative has brought together the federal government, state agencies, universities and private industry to determine which options for capturing and storing greenhouse gases are most practicable for specific areas of the country.

    The international, ministerial-level Carbon Sequestration Leadership Forum will continue to execute its mission of gathering data, exchanging information and participating in joint plans to advance carbon sequestration technology.
  • The Integrated Gasification Combined Cycle (IGCC) Plan will continue to concentrate efforts on gas stream purification to meet quality requirements for use with fuel cells and conversion processes, on impurity tolerant hydrogen separation, on elevating process efficiency, and on reducing the costs and energy requirements for oxygen production through development of advanced technologies such as membranes.
  • The Advanced Turbines Plan is centered on creating a turbine-technology base that will permit the design of near-zero atmospheric emission IGCC plants and a class of FutureGen-descended plants with carbon capture and sequestration. This research emphasizes technology for high-efficiency hydrogen and syngas turbines and builds on prior successes in the Natural Gas-based Advanced Turbine Systems Program.
  • The Carbon Sequestration Plan is developing a portfolio of technologies with great potential to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Primary concentration is on dramatically lowering the cost and energy requirements of pre- and post-combustion carbon dioxide capture. The goal is to have by 2012 a technology portfolio enabling safe, cost-effective and long-term carbon mitigation, management and storage which will lead to substantial market penetration after 2012. The Plan is expected to contribute significantly to the President's goal of developing technologies to substantially reduce greenhouse gas emissions in the long term and to fill a critical need in efforts ultimately to stabilize U.S. greenhouse gas emissions.
  • The Fuels Plan conducts the research necessary to promote the transition to a hydrogen economy. Research targets cost reduction and increased efficiency of hydrogen production from coal feedstocks as part of the President's Hydrogen Fuel Initiative and in support of the FutureGen project.
  • Advanced Research plans seek a greater understanding of the physical, chemical, biological, and thermodynamic barriers that limit the use of coal and other fossil fuels. The Plan funds 2 categories of activity. The 1st includes applied research programs to develop the technology base needed for the development of super-clean, very high efficiency coal-based power and coal-based fuel systems. The 2nd is a set of crosscutting studies and assessment activities in environmental, technical and economic analyses, coal technology export, and integrated Plan support.
  • Objectives of Fuel Cells activity are to provide the technology-based development of low-cost, scalable, and fuel flexible fuel cell systems that can operate in central coal-based power systems and have applications in other electric utility (both central and distributed), industrial, and commercial/residential markets (Not included in the President's Coal Research Initiative).

Oil and Natural Gas Technology
Petroleum - Oil Technology and Natural Gas Technologies research and development programs will be terminated in FY 2008, consistent with the FY 2007 Budget request.

The Oil and Gas group will manage the Ultra-Deep and Unconventional Natural Gas Research Plan mandated by the Energy Policy Act of 2005. However, the Administration will propose legislation to terminate this program, which is funded from federal oil and gas lease revenues.

Petroleum Reserves
The President is requesting $354 million for operating the nation's Strategic Petroleum Reserves and to increase the capacity of the reserves to 1.5 billion barrels by 2027.

Strategic Petroleum Reserve
Created to insure against supply disruptions that could harm our economy, the FY 2008 Strategic Petroleum Reserve budget suggests $163 million for facilities development and adds $168 million to begin expansion of the Reserve to 1.5 billion barrels.

The process begins immediately with filling to the current capacity of 727 million barrels, and would increase the expansion capacity further at existing and new sites in FY 2008.

Northeast Home Heating Oil Reserve
The FY 2008 budget request is $5 million and targeted to protect the Northeast states during times of very low inventories and significant threats to immediate supply. The two-million barrel Reserve protects the Northeast against a supply disruption for up to ten days -- the time required for ships to carry heating oil from the Gulf of Mexico to New York Harbor for distribution.

Naval Petroleum and Oil Shale Reserves
The FY 2008 budget request is $17 million. The mission of the Naval Petroleum and Oil Shale Reserve is to complete environmental remediation activities and to determine the equity finalization of Naval Petroleum Reserve (NPR) 1. It also serves to operate NPR-3 until its economic limit is reached, while maintaining the Rocky Mountain Oil Field Test Center as a field demonstration facility.

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