Cost–Benefit Analysis of HELE and Subcritical Coal-Fired Electricity Generation Technologies in Southeast Asia
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methodology
2.1. LCOE
- FCF is the fixed charge factor. The factor turns capital costs into a uniform annual amount and is given by:
- CAPEX is the capital expenditure (USD/MW). There are no publicly available CAPEX data sets for ASEAN countries. For our analysis, these figures are therefore replaced with engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) costs, in which other costs may incur additionally, such as land cost, cost of any additional emission controls and other financing costs;
- O&Mfixed is the fixed operation and maintenance (O&M) cost (USD/MW);
- CF is the capacity factor. It is a fraction between 0 and 1 representing the total generation of a plant as proportion to its nameplate capacity;
- 8760 is the number of hours in a year;
- O&Mvariable is variable O&M cost (USD/MW);
- Πfuel is the fuel price (USD/GJ (USD/MMBtu)); and
- HR is the heat rate (GJ/MWh (MMBtu/MWh)).
2.2. Scenarios Description
2.2.1. Scenario 1 (Base Scenario)
2.2.2. Scenario 2 (Climate Change Mitigation Scenario)
2.2.3. Scenario 3 (Pollution Control Scenario)
2.2.4. Scenario 4 (Climate Change Mitigation and Pollution Control Scenario)
2.3. General Assumptions
2.4. Cost Assumptions and Methodologies
3. Results
4. Discussion, Policy Implications and Future Directions
- In the short term, the implementation of an efficient and impactful harmonized carbon pricing policy for coal-fired plants in all ASEAN countries is necessary to support the first-best driver, Scenario 2, to displace the subcritical plants and shift investments to emerging HELE opportunities in the ASEAN market. This would yield clean coal technology (CCT) for Southeast Asia and bring many benefits for the environment and people of the region.
- ASEAN countries have relatively lower emission standards of SOx, NOx and particulates when compared with OECD countries [23,37]. It is therefore very important to regulate continuation of coal through stringent environmental and emission standards to pave the way for HELE technologies. A long-term carbon policy coupled with emissions standards and effective enforcement is thus needed to support the second-best driver, Scenario 4, to shift the balance in favor of HELE plants. However, since the inclusion of a carbon price and raising emission standards causes a further rise in LCOE values, the ASEAN countries need to better understand how this move will affect the regional economic developments before it becomes an effective policy tool.
- In general, the clean use of fossil fuel will need to be accelerated in the policy agenda in ASEAN. Therefore, policy reform to accommodate clean fuels and technologies is urgently needed to ensure that clean use of fossil fuel will play a significant role for energy transition from a fossil fuel-based energy system towards a clean energy system where renewables and clean fuels play a major role in the future energy mix.
5. Conclusions
- The climate change mitigation and pollution control scenario (i.e., a mix of carbon price and emission control technologies) is the second-best driver scenario (at the cost of increased LCOE prices as compared to Scenario 2);
- Reduced coal prices and increased life spans benefit both HELE and subcritical coal-fired power plants;
- HELE coal-fired power plants are economically competitive against subcritical plants;
- A-USC coal-fired power plants are the most economically attractive choice for deployment in Southeast Asia, followed by USC and SC plants.
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
ACE | ASEAN centre for energy |
ASEAN | Association of southeast Asian nations |
A-USC | Advanced ultra-supercritical |
Btu | British thermal unit |
CAPEX | Capital expenditure |
CCS | Carbon capture and storage |
CCT | Clean coal technology |
CF | Capacity factor |
CO2 | Carbon dioxide |
deNOx | Denitrification |
deSOx | Desulphurization |
EPC | Engineering, procurement and construction |
ERIA | Economic Research Institute for ASEAN and East Asia |
ETP | Energy technology perspectives |
FCR | Fixed charge rate |
GAR | Gross as received |
gce/kWh | Grams coal equivalent per kWh |
GHG | Greenhouse gas |
g/kWh | Grams per kilowatt hour |
GW | Gigawatt |
GWh | Gigawatt hours |
HELE | High-efficiency low-emissions |
Hg | Mercury |
HHV | High heating value |
IEA | International energy agency |
IGCC | Integrated gasification combined cycle |
IGFC | Integrated gasification fuel cell |
IPCC | Intergovernmental panel on climate change |
kcal/kg | Kilocalorie per kilogram |
kg-CO2/kg-coal | Kg of CO2 per Kg of coal |
kg-coal/kWh | Kg of coal per kilowatt hour |
kW | Kilowatt |
kWh | Kilowatt hour |
LCOE | Levelized cost of electricity |
LHV | Low heating value |
MMBtu | One million Btus |
mt | Metric ton |
MW | Megawatt |
NOx | Nitrogen oxides |
NO2 | Nitrogen dioxide |
O&M | Operation and maintenance |
O&Mfixed | Fixed O&M charges |
O&Mvariable | Variable O&M charges |
OECD | Organization for economic co-operation and development |
SC | Supercritical |
SO2 | Sulphur dioxide |
SOx | Sulphur oxides |
ton/MWh | Ton per megawatt hour |
TWh | Terawatt-hour |
USC | Ultra-supercritical |
US$ | US dollars |
2DS | 2 °C scenario |
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Efficiency Rate (% Net LHV Basis) | CO2 Intensity | Coal Consumption | Steam Temperature | |
---|---|---|---|---|
A-USC | 45–50% | 670–740 g CO2/kWh | 290–320 g/kWh | 700 °C |
USC | Up to 45% | 740–800 g CO2/kWh | 320–340 g/kWh | 600 °C |
SC | Up to 42% | 800–880 g CO2/kWh | 340–380 g/kWh | Approx. 550–600 °C |
Subcritical | Up to 38% | ≥880 g CO2/kWh | ≥380 g/kWh | <550 °C |
Efficiency Rate (% Net HHV Basis) | Heat Rate of Fuel (Btu/kWh) (HHV Basis) | |
---|---|---|
A-USC | 47% | 7259.57 (Btu/kWh) |
USC | 42% | 8123.81 (Btu/kWh) |
SC | 39% | 8748.72 (Btu/kWh) |
Subcritical | 35% | 9748.57 (Btu/kWh) |
Values | Remarks | ||
---|---|---|---|
Plant | Capacity | 1000 MW | For cash flow purposes |
Operation | 20, 25 years | ||
Operation rate | 80% | ||
Thermal efficiencies | 47%(A-USC), 42% (USC), 39% (SC), 35%(subcritical) | HHV based values. A 3% decrease in thermal efficiency is assumed. | |
Annual generation | 7008 GWh | ||
Coal specifications | Heating value | 4000 kcal/Kg or equivalently 1008.656 Btu/Kg | |
CO2 emissions | 1.43 kg-CO2/kg coal | Based on IPCC 2006 default emission for stationary combustion in the energy sector [33]. |
Factors | ||
---|---|---|
LCOE | Base plant | EPC |
O&M | ||
Fuel cost | ||
deSOx deNOx | EPC | |
O&M | ||
Additional fuel cost | ||
Financing | Internal Rate of Return (IRR) | |
CO2 | Carbon |
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Ali, H.; Phoumin, H.; Weller, S.R.; Suryadi, B. Cost–Benefit Analysis of HELE and Subcritical Coal-Fired Electricity Generation Technologies in Southeast Asia. Sustainability 2021, 13, 1591. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13031591
Ali H, Phoumin H, Weller SR, Suryadi B. Cost–Benefit Analysis of HELE and Subcritical Coal-Fired Electricity Generation Technologies in Southeast Asia. Sustainability. 2021; 13(3):1591. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13031591
Chicago/Turabian StyleAli, Hassan, Han Phoumin, Steven R. Weller, and Beni Suryadi. 2021. "Cost–Benefit Analysis of HELE and Subcritical Coal-Fired Electricity Generation Technologies in Southeast Asia" Sustainability 13, no. 3: 1591. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13031591
APA StyleAli, H., Phoumin, H., Weller, S. R., & Suryadi, B. (2021). Cost–Benefit Analysis of HELE and Subcritical Coal-Fired Electricity Generation Technologies in Southeast Asia. Sustainability, 13(3), 1591. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13031591