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30 Jan 2009
China has experienced huge change over the past 30 years. But even amidst that change, coal has been the pillar of the country’s energy sector and its dominance will likely continue for the next 30 years. And that will be true even though coal is exacting a heavy toll in terms of pollution, land destruction, and human health.
Ever since 1978, when Deng Xiaoping launched the economic reforms, coal
has been dominant. Without it, Chinese industry would literally grind
to a halt. This year, coal will account for about 75 percent of
industrial fuel use, 76 percent of electricity generation, 80 percent
of civil and commercial energy, and 60 percent of chemical feedstock.
Indeed, the entire country is geared toward coal development. Coal
provides about 70 percent of the country’s primary energy and that high
percentage (second only to South Africa) explains why China has become
one of the world’s biggest emitters of greenhouse gases. China’s carbon
dioxide emissions are about equal to those of the US even though per
capita energy use in the US is seven times as high as China’s.
China can rely on coal because of its huge reserves. One estimate puts
total reserves at about 8 trillion tons of coal in place, with one
trillion tons of proven reserves, of which some 280 billion tons are
recoverable. (For reference the BP Statistical Review puts China’s coal
reserves at 114 billion tons.) About 76 percent of the coal reserves
are in the northwestern regions of Xinjiang, Inner Mongolia, Shanxi,
Shaanxi and Ningxia provinces.
Coal fields are distributed throughout the country. They cover about
600,000 square kilometers or some 6 percent of the land area of the
country. And those reserves account for about 94 percent of China’s
total proven fossil energy reserves. Of the total coal reserves, 13
percent is lignite, 75 percent is bituminous, and 13 percent is
anthracite. Steam coal takes about 73 percent, of which 70 percent is
located in Shanxi, Inner Mongolia, Shandong and Henan provinces.
As the economy continues to grow, driven by the rapid urban expansion
and the government’s plan to double GDP by 2020 over 2000 levels, the
government sees tremendous coal demand ahead. A recent report by the
Energy Research Institute, an arm of the powerful National Development
and Reform Commission, China’s urban population will grow by 350
million from 2005 to 2025. By the end of 2007, China had an urban
population of 594 million out of the total population of 1.3 billion.
Each year, 15 million people migrate to cities from rural areas, which
has created more than 12 million new jobs annually.
The urban expansion is fueling energy demand. In 2008, China produced
2.62 billion tons of coal. Hu Cunzhi, chief planner of the Ministry of
Land and Resources, expects annual coal output to increase to 2.9
billion tons by 2010, to 3.3 billion tons by 2015, and to 3.5 billion
tons by 2020. Of the total, China’s largest coal-producing province of
Shanxi plans to raise its coal production to 700 million tons per year
by 2010, up from 540 million tons in 2008.
In 2005, China began adding coal production capacity, with plans to
build 13 coal production zones that will include 98 existing mines and
500 new mines with capacity totaling 1.3 billion tons. The zones are
located in 14 provinces and regions in northwestern, southwestern,
northern, and central China. These zones cover 103,000 square
kilometers, and have total coal reserves of 690.8 billion tons,
accounting for 70 percent of China’s total. Out of the 2.9 billion tons
of coal production by 2010, 2.24 billion tons will come from the 13 new
zones.
Environmental Costs
Coal-fired power plants account for 74 percent of China’s total sulfur
dioxide emissions, 60 percent of nitrous oxide emissions and 70 percent
of total suspended particles. The emissions are a primary contributor
to China’s myriad air-quality woes and they are causing acid rain
problems in countries like Japan and South Korea.
The country’s major power plants consumed 1.34 billion tons of coal in
2008, up 4 percent over 2007. The figure will rise to 1.75 billion tons
by 2020, with coal accounting for 73 percent of China’s power
generation. In 2008, 90,510 megawatts of new generating capacity came
into operation, including 65,750 MW of thermal power. China’s total
generating capacity thus rose by 10.34 percent to 792,530 MW, just
short of the government’s target of 800,000 MW.
In 2005, coal-fired power plants emitted 2.2 billion tons of carbon
dioxide, accounting for 43 percent of China’s total carbon dioxide
emissions. The volume has kept growing, as the government has not found
a way to reduce carbon dioxide emissions. According to a government
estimate, by 2030, China will need to build up to 700 gigawatts of
coal-fired power generation capacity. While the government is working
to improve the non-carbon power generation by building more wind and
solar power facilities, as in all other countries, these energy sources
cannot make a dent any time soon in the coal-generated power.
Work to improve China’s energy efficiency and reduce pollution emissions
has proved difficult. Progress has been so slow in achieving
improvements that government finds it hard to meet targets set for
2010, NDRC chairman Zhang Ping said. “High-emission and
energy-intensive industries are likely to grow faster over
the next two years,” Zhang said recently.
Improvements in both areas demand investment in new technology and new
equipment, and this is proving challenging as businesses are cutting
costs to focus on survival during the global economic slowdown. The
NDRC’s 2010 targets included reducing emissions of major pollutants
such as sulphur dioxide and carbon dioxide by 10 percent from 2006
levels.
The government has planned to spend up to $4.4 billion to install
sulfur-capturing units at 221 of its coal-fired power plants, with the
goal of cutting 10 percent of its sulfur dioxide emissions by 2010. In
addition, policies favoring desulfurized power plants are being
implemented, such as granting priority to those that connect to local
grids, and allowing them to operate longer than plants that do not
desulfurize.
The coal-fired power plants scheduled for sulfur-capturing units have a
total generating capacity of 137 GW, about 27 percent of China’s
capacity. That 137-gigawatt total breaks down as follows: 7.37
gigawatts from 12 plants owned by the State Power Grid Corp.; 17.62
gigawatts from 34 power plants of the Huaneng Group; 18.12 gigawatts
from 61 power plants of the Datang Group; 9.34 gigawatts from 81 power
plants of the Huadian Group; 13.56 gigawatts from 107 power plants of
the Guodian Group; 10.33 gigawatts from the China Power Investment Co.;
and 60.26 gigawatts owned by local authorities.
Some of the sulfur-removal equipment is already in place. In 2006,
power plants with a total of 57.6 gigawatts installed such equipment,
34.47 gigawatts was installed in 2007, 28.75 gigawatts in 2008, and the
remaining 12.78 gigawatts in 2009.
In part to cut pollution and improve energy efficiency, Chinese
authorities shut down 553 small thermal power generators with a total
capacity of nearly 14.4 gigawatts, in 2007. These small units were to
be replaced with large generators with a single-set capacity in excess
of 50 MW. The NDRC projects that the larger plants will help the
country save 18.8 million tons of coal and cut emissions of sulfur
dioxide by 290,000 tons emissions of carbon dioxide by and 37.6 million
tons, annually. By 2010, China plans to close some 50 GW of small
coal-fired plants and another 10 GW of small oil-fired units in order
to cut pollutants discharges by 10 percent. Getting rid of the small
power plants is critical if those targets are to be met. Although they
provide a fraction of the country’s overall power supply, they create
nearly 40 percent of the total sulfur dioxide discharged by the
country's power industry.
Safety Costs
In 2005 China had 28,000 coal mines, over 2,000 of which were
state-owned, with recovery rates averaging 45 percent of reserves.
Townships and individuals owned 26,000, with recovery rates ranging
between 15 and 20 percent. Of the total number of coal mines, 23,000
were considered small with annual production capacity of less than
300,000 tons.
These smaller mines have become major sources of pollution as well as
the primary culprit for accidents with large casualties and losses.
While small coal mines produce only 30 percent of China’s coal,
accidents in these mines account for two-thirds of China’s mining
fatalities.
Chinese coalmines are notoriously unsafe due to lack to modern
facilities, excessive amount of mine gases and/or negligence of safety
rules. The poor worksite safety at small coal mines administered at
county levels has been an ongoing problem for the central government,
which continues its effort to shut them down.
The government wants to close small mines, merge medium-sized ones, and
build larger ones. But the effort to shutter the smaller mines has been
met with strong resistance at local levels because of conflicting
interests between the local and central governments. Between 2008 and
2010, China is poised to close 4,000 small mines. Of that number, 1,500
will be either merged or have their capacity expanded, while the rest
will be shuttered. All told by the end of 2008, China had closed 12,155
small mines due to their poor safety record and low operational
efficiency, cutting capacity by 300 million tons.
Most accidents are caused by inadequate safety infrastructure or
outdated and worn-out safety facilities. Many coal mines exceed their
mining capacities in pursuit of profit, risking dangerous gas build-ups
in the tunnels of depleting mines. Gas explosions are the biggest cause
of miner fatalities. According to government data, China’s coal
production accounts for 31 percent of the world total. But its coal
mine casualties account for 79 percent of the world’s total.
In 2005, 5,986 coal miners were killed in 3,341 accidents. The number
of deaths declined 0.7 percent from 2004 and the number of accidents
dropped by 8.2 percent, thanks to the new investment the government
made to improve mine site safety.
In 2006, China recorded 2,945 coalmine accidents, which killed 4,746
miners. In the first 10 months of 2007, 3,069 miners were killed in
1,920 accidents.
Figures for 2008 are not available, but it is understood to have fallen
by a big margin thanks to the tougher efforts on worksite safety in
order ensure the success of Olympics. In the top producing province of
Shanxi, 303 people died in 120 coalmine accidents in 2008, down by 34
percent and 19 percent respectively. In 2008, small coalmines produced
35 percent of China’s coal, but death tolls account for 73 percent.
The government has realized that investment in safety improvement alone
will not be enough to solve the problem. Further action is on the way.
China is poised to revise the Coal Law, in place since 1996, to tighten
measures for coal mine safety and bring to justice officials who are
found to be responsible for coal mine accidents.
Transportation Bottlenecks and Trade
While China has huge resources, the government is having difficulty
moving the coal from the mines in the north and west to the markets in
the south and east.
In addition to a few coal-dedicated railways, China is planning to
build more railways in order to transport coal produced from Xinjiang
region in the northwest to the market. The line will start from Hami
city of Xinjiang, branching out with two spur lines. The idea is to
further tap coal reserves in Hami to help quench the demand for coal in
the eastern provinces. The scheme calls for building a $17.6 billion
trunk line from Hami to Lanzhou city of Gansu province for passenger
transportation, while the existing Hami-Lanzhou line will be used for
transporting coal only.
In the meantime, power companies are building dedicated railways in the
province. For instance, China Power Investment is building a rail line
between Jinzhou and cities in the northeast.
In 2007, China transported 1.54 billion tons of coal by train, 220 million tons by highway and 244 million tons by river or sea.
China has been discouraging coal miners from exporting their output by
introducing a tight new quota regime. The move is designed to ensure
there is sufficient supply to meet strong domestic demand for coal. The
government issued a total coal export quota of 47.7 million tons in
2008, down from 100 million tons in 2003. In August 2008, the
government imposed 10 percent export duty on steam coal and anthracite
which further slowed exports.
In 2009, exports are expected to continue weakening as a result of the tightened quota as well as depressed global demand.
Imports dropped 21 percent in 2008 to 40.4 million tons as demand waned
in the face of the global financial crisis. Chinese authorities have
been cutting import duties on steam coal and anthracite in order to
assure adequate supplies.
CTL
China has been flirting with coal-to-liquids (CTL) since 1999, with its
first CTL project in Henan province. However, that 10,000
barrel-per-day project ended once it was discovered that the coal being
used was unfit for liquefaction.
By 2015, China hopes to be producing about 1 million barrels of motor
fuel per day. Although China is moving forward on CTL, a number of
problems loom. First and foremost is the air-quality problem.
Coal-related pollution is already emerging as a major environmental
headache. Officials are willing to accept increased coal use if this
leads to improved environmental conditions. But CTL is not a likely
solution; their facilities produce huge amounts of carbon dioxide and
they require enormous amounts of water. Industry officials say that
about 100,000 tons of water are necessary to produce 200,000 barrels
per day of liquids from coal, a hurdle since most of the proposed CTL
projects are planned for the country’s northern regions, which are
already short of water.
Therefore, the central government has now taken a cautious step to
develop the sector, in effect requiring local governments to stall on
any new CTL projects. And last September, the central government
announced that all but two of the country’s CTL projects had been
halted in an attempt to control surging investment in the
water-intensive sector. In a circular sent out just before the official
announcement, the NDRC told local governments that they should try to
find ways of developing CTL technology via pilot projects, before
moving on to building projects.
Companies that saw planned projects culled include Yankuang Group’s
plant in Shaanxi province with annual production capacity of 100,000
bpd, and Lu’an Group’s plant. Shenhua also had one of its two projects
axed, a CTL project it planned to build with Sasol in Shaanxi province.
In late December, Shenhua Group CTL and Chemical, completed the
construction of the country’s first major CTL project, a 200,000 bpd
unit in Ordos, Inner Mongolia. But, industry sources said the company
may wait for a rally in crude oil prices before it begins operation.
The government wants to use Shenhua as a pilot project to usher in the
country’s CTL sector as enunciated by Chinese premier Wen Jiabao in
June 2006 when he visited Shenhua. Wen said that CTL projects should be
done “on a trial basis” and that “coal liquefaction projects should not
be carried out in a rush.”
The project’s coal liquefaction reactor was fabricated by China First
Heavy Industries. The hydrogen unit, using Shell gasification
technology, consists of two series with identical design capacity of
313 tons per day hydrogen output. The air separation section, supplied
by Linde AG, has two lines, each with a capacity of 50,000 cubic meters
per hour.
When the project was planned in 2007, the cost of generating each ton
of oil was estimated at $45. But “the figure has changed as the prices
of coal and oil have been fluctuating,” according to officials with
Shenhua.
The other looming CTL project is a joint venture between Shenhua’s
Ningxia Coal Industry Group and South Africa’s Sasol Ltd. It will use
indirect liquefaction technology, which Sasol has developed and used
for decades. This project, although officially still going ahead, has
however, yet to break ground.
In all, the Chinese government has planned to invest as much as $150
billion in CTL projects by 2020. But if low crude prices persist that
money is unlikely to be allocated any time soon.
Regardless of when that money is allocated, it is obvious that at the
same time that the US and other developed countries are increasingly
reluctant to utilize their coal resources, China is surging forward
with massive investments in all types of coal infrastructure. Indeed,
when it comes to coal, China’s future is looking a lot like its past.
Source: Energy Tribune