Coal cleaning: A viable strategy for reduced carbon emissions and improved environment in China?
Abstract
Abstract:
China is a dominant energy consumer in a global context and current energy forecasts emphasise
that China’s future energy consumption also will rely heavily on coal. The coal use is the major
source of the greenhouse gas CO2 and particles causing serious health damage. This paper looks
into the question if coal washing might work as low cost strategy for both CO2 and particle emission
reductions. Coal washing removes dirt and rock from raw coal, resulting in a coal product with higher
thermal energy and less air pollutants. Coal cleaning capacity has so far not been developed in line
with the market potential. In this paper an emerging market for cleaned coal is studied within a CGE
model for China. The macro approach catches the repercussions of coal cleaning through increased
energy efficiency, lower coal transportation costs and crowding out effect of investments in coal
washing plants. Coal cleaning stimulates economic growth and reduces particle emissions, but total
energy use, coal use and CO2 emissions increase through a rebound effect supported by the vast
reserve of underemployed labourers. A carbon tax on fossil fuel combustion has a limited effect on
total emissions. The reason is a coal leakage to tax exempted processing industries.