Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1744998 Journal of Cleaner Production 2014 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Atmospheric impact of selected geothermal power plants is investigated.•Main focus is placed on electricity production phase.•Global warming, acidification and human toxicology impact categories are quantified.•Impacts of flash-steam plants is found often higher than from fossil powered plants.•For geothermal energy to be more sustainable incondensable fluids must be re-injected.

Geothermal plants supply a significant contribution to the electricity balance from renewable sources in Tuscany. However, this electricity conversion is not exempt from environmental drawbacks.In our study, the electricity production phases of four geothermal electricity plants are analyzed by means of a careful airborne emissions assessment carried out over the entire LCA of the plants. The impact categories considered are global warming (GWP), acidification (ACP) and human toxicology (HTP). The functional unit used is 1 MWh of electric energy produced from geothermal power plants in Mount Amiata area.For the environmental impact categories considered, the impact potentials are evaluated for each of the four geothermal power plants as follows: 380–1045 kg CO2 eq/MWh for GWP, 0.1–44.8 kg SO2 eq/MWh for ACP and 1.1–31.6 kg, 1.4-DB eq/MWh for HTP. The main contributions to the impact are associated with the high content of NH3, H2S, CH4 and CO2 gases present in the effluents of each plant. The impact change in relation to the geothermal site has a strong correlation to the basin of fluid withdrawal and is related to the technologies used for pollutants depletion. In some cases the impact is higher than that found for production of electricity from fossil fuels (for example, a coal plant of comparable power).

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
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