Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Developing a Novel Environmental Assessment Model for Power Generation Plants
View through CrossRef
Environmental assessment is a concept that has been designed to facilitate the present generation to meet their needs without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs as well. Thus, this concept has drawn significant attention from various scholars, researchers and industrial practitioners around the world over the past three decades. Life Cycle Environmental Assessment (LCEA) is a widely metric used to assess the potential ecological impacts, which can be caused by electricity generating supply systems or by other systems than power production plants. However, the current LCEA model is biased and ineffective. Because, its omits factors that are increasingly contributing to the ecological degradation. This study has identified the omitted factors through a critical analysis of a set of previous journal articles conducted in the energy sector. In light of this, this study has developed a novel LCEA framework addressing those blind spots. The framework developed in this study is holistic in nature including all the life cycle stages of a power supply system such as Extraction of the Raw Material (ERM), Transport of Raw Material (TRM), Conversion of Raw into Electricity (CRE), and Transmission and Distribution of Electricity (TDE) to the end users. The novel developed LCEA model has been tested and applied to nine power generation plants such as coal, gas, nuclear, biomass, geothermal, hydro, solar thermal, wind onshore and wind offshore. The results have demonstrated that of conventional technologies including coal, gas, and nuclear, coal energy generating source has got the highest life cycle greenhouse gas Grid Emission Factor (GEF) of 2866 kg CO2e/MWh, followed by gas with 728 kg CO2e/MWh, and nuclear has got the least GEF of 35 kg CO2e/MWh. Whereas of renewable energy sources biomass has got the highest GEF of 1508 kg CO2e/MWh, followed by solar thermal with 46.6 kg CO2e/MWh, hydro 39 kg CO2e/MWh, wind offshore 25.25 kg CO2e/MWh, wind onshore 10.1 kg CO2e/MWh, and geothermal closes the ranking with 6.23 kg CO2e/MWh.
Title: Developing a Novel Environmental Assessment Model for Power Generation Plants
Description:
Environmental assessment is a concept that has been designed to facilitate the present generation to meet their needs without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs as well.
Thus, this concept has drawn significant attention from various scholars, researchers and industrial practitioners around the world over the past three decades.
Life Cycle Environmental Assessment (LCEA) is a widely metric used to assess the potential ecological impacts, which can be caused by electricity generating supply systems or by other systems than power production plants.
However, the current LCEA model is biased and ineffective.
Because, its omits factors that are increasingly contributing to the ecological degradation.
This study has identified the omitted factors through a critical analysis of a set of previous journal articles conducted in the energy sector.
In light of this, this study has developed a novel LCEA framework addressing those blind spots.
The framework developed in this study is holistic in nature including all the life cycle stages of a power supply system such as Extraction of the Raw Material (ERM), Transport of Raw Material (TRM), Conversion of Raw into Electricity (CRE), and Transmission and Distribution of Electricity (TDE) to the end users.
The novel developed LCEA model has been tested and applied to nine power generation plants such as coal, gas, nuclear, biomass, geothermal, hydro, solar thermal, wind onshore and wind offshore.
The results have demonstrated that of conventional technologies including coal, gas, and nuclear, coal energy generating source has got the highest life cycle greenhouse gas Grid Emission Factor (GEF) of 2866 kg CO2e/MWh, followed by gas with 728 kg CO2e/MWh, and nuclear has got the least GEF of 35 kg CO2e/MWh.
Whereas of renewable energy sources biomass has got the highest GEF of 1508 kg CO2e/MWh, followed by solar thermal with 46.
6 kg CO2e/MWh, hydro 39 kg CO2e/MWh, wind offshore 25.
25 kg CO2e/MWh, wind onshore 10.
1 kg CO2e/MWh, and geothermal closes the ranking with 6.
23 kg CO2e/MWh.
Related Results
Downhole Power Generation: Status, Problems, and Prospects
Downhole Power Generation: Status, Problems, and Prospects
Abstract
Downhole power generation is an important technology for the oil/gas industry. It provides a steady source of power for all types of operations, including d...
A Synergistic Imperative: An Integrated Policy and Education Framework for Navigating the Climate Nexus
A Synergistic Imperative: An Integrated Policy and Education Framework for Navigating the Climate Nexus
Climate change acts as a systemic multiplier of threats, exacerbating interconnected global crises that jeopardize food security, biodiversity, and environmental health. These chal...
Ethnobotanical profiles of wild edible plants recorded from Mongolia by Yunatov during 1940–1951
Ethnobotanical profiles of wild edible plants recorded from Mongolia by Yunatov during 1940–1951
AbstractMongolian traditional botanical knowledge has been rarely researched concerning the ethnobotany theory and methodology in the last six decades (Pei in Acta Botanica Yunnani...
Materialism and Environmental Knowledge as a Mediator for Relationships between Religiosity and Ethical Consumption
Materialism and Environmental Knowledge as a Mediator for Relationships between Religiosity and Ethical Consumption
ABSTRACTOn a global and regional scale, Indonesia has one of the least environmentally sustainable economies in the Asia-Pacific region. Consumption is one of the key factors contr...
Safety Analysis About Combined Heat and Power Generation of Nuclear Power Plant
Safety Analysis About Combined Heat and Power Generation of Nuclear Power Plant
Abstract
Nuclear energy is one of the most efficient, clean and stable energy sources. The technology of combined heat and power generation, which is widely used in ...
Environmental Decentralization, Environmental
Regulation and Environmental Pollution:
Evidence from China
Environmental Decentralization, Environmental
Regulation and Environmental Pollution:
Evidence from China
Environmental decentralization is an institutional factor that influences the effect of ecological
environment governance. Based on panel data of provinces in China from 2008 to 20...
[RETRACTED] Keto Max Power - BURN FATINSTEAD OF CARBS with Keto Max Power! v1
[RETRACTED] Keto Max Power - BURN FATINSTEAD OF CARBS with Keto Max Power! v1
[RETRACTED]Keto Max Power Reviews: Warning! Don’t Buy Dragons Den Pills Fast Until You Read This UK Latest Report Weight gain’s principle of “energy intake exceeding energy spent”...
Integrating Environmental Sustainability into Civil and Geotechnical Design for Energy Infrastructure
Integrating Environmental Sustainability into Civil and Geotechnical Design for Energy Infrastructure
The global shift towards sustainable development has placed increasing emphasis on the integration of environmental
sustainability within the design, construction, and management o...

