News Release

Environment-friendly electricity in China

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Researchers assessed properties of coal-bioenergy gasification systems combined with carbon capture and storage (CBECCS) in China that use crop residues as biomass inputs and found that a crop residue ratio greater than 35% could allow for generation of electricity with net-zero life-cycle emissions of greenhouse gases at a cost of approximately 9.2 US cents/kWh at a carbon price of $52 per ton; the findings suggest that CBECCS systems offer a carbon-negative alternative for electricity generation while also helping to reducing air pollution.

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Article #18-12239: "Gasification of coal and biomass as a net carbonnegative power source for environment-friendly electricity generation in China," by Xi Lu et al.

MEDIA CONTACT: Michael B. McElroy, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA; tel: 617-495-4359; email: <mbm@seas.harvard.edu>; Xi Lu, Tsinghua University, Beijing, CHINA; tel: 861062781331; email: <xilu@tsinghua.edu.cn>


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