Forum: Our Readers Write
First Published March 2008
Image: Christopher Pillitz/getty images
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The Truth Behind the Numbers
"Greenhouse-Gas
Trends” [The Data, January] states that
Europe decreased greenhouse-gas emissions from 1990
to 2005 while the United States increased emissions.
This ignores the very reason that 1990 was chosen as
the baseline year for the U.S.-rejected Kyoto
Protocol.
In 1990, at the time of the fall of the Berlin
Wall, Europe knew that bringing the former Eastern
bloc countries up to Western European standards
would result in a huge decrease in all sorts of
pollutants from the very dirty smokestack industries
prevalent during the Soviet era. If you discount
that cleanup, it is a sure bet that Europe as a
whole would have had a net increase in
greenhouse-gas emissions over the same time period.
Ken Javor
IEEE Member
Huntsville, Ala.
Evaluating Carbon Cleanup
William Sweet’s article, “Restoring
Coal’s Sheen” [January], missed a
question critical to cleaning up the burning of
fossil fuels—namely, what is the overall energy
balance for the process described in the article?
Every scheme needs to look at the total impact on
cycle (fuel-to-electricity) conversion efficiency.
If you start with a coal-fired plant and add an
air-separator plant on the front end, flue-gas
recycling fans and two sets of cooler/condenser
systems in the middle, and a
CO2 gas-to-liquid compressor
system on the back end, and then truck the liquid
CO2 somewhere off-site and
pump it into the ground, what is the resultant “womb
to tomb” efficiency of the process in kilowatts per
hour?
John Spencer
IEEE Senior Member
Oreana, Ill.
William Sweet
responds: The total system energy
balance—together with economic and carbon
balances—is among the key issues to be evaluated at
the Schwarze Pumpe demonstration plant. The energy
costs associated with the oxygen-nitrogen
separation system are especially high, and
Vattenfall considers it crucial to get those costs
down in future oxyfuel plants. With the U.S.
Department of Energy’s cancellation of the FutureGen
project—a big coal-gasification plant that would
have generated electricity and yielded hydrogen,
with the carbon dioxide captured and stored—Schwarze
Pumpe is more than ever the only game in town.
Vattenfall and Alstom Power are to be commended
because this will be the first
larger-than-laboratory-scale plant to evaluate all
aspects of capturing and sequestering
CO2 using the oxyfuel process.
Is Journal Publication Obsolete?
Robert W. Lucky’s “Technical
Publications and the Internet”
[Reflections, January] raises an important issue.
Today the information in scientific and
professional journals can be submitted and
transmitted electronically; the Internet makes
printing and shipping journal copies obsolete. The
true function of a refereed journal, then, is to
filter information through a committee of recognized
experts. However, journal publication is likely to
reduce the number of people who will see your work.
Much scientific work is now interdisciplinary, so
you really need many subscriptions. You cannot very
well subscribe to a dozen expensive journals. If
you have a sufficiently large library nearby, you
must go there once a week or so. At some point you
may simply give up—and miss an important new paper.
Further, copyright restrictions prevent your
reading the full text of most papers on the
Internet. Societies like the IEEE offer publications
on the Web, but they charge fees affordable only by
large libraries or businesses.
This problem can be solved neatly. All we need are
the editorial committees—those of currently
existing journals will do nicely—and Web pages.
Members of the vital expert editorial committees
normally don’t charge for their services. The small
cost of a Web page and a webmaster would be no
problem for libraries and professional societies.
Libraries would save hugely on subscriptions and
storage space. Everybody would benefit.
Granino A. Korn IEEE Fellow, Chelan, Wash.
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