Abstract

Concentrating Solar Power (CSP) technology is developing in order to achieve higher energy efficiency, reduced economic costs, and improved firmness and dispatchability in the generation of power on demand. To this purpose, a research project titled HYSOL has developed a new power plant, consisting of a combined cycle configuration with a 100 MWe steam turbine and an 80 MWe gas-fed turbine with biomethane. Technological developments must be supported by the identification, quantification, and evaluation of the environmental impacts produced. The aim of this paper is to evaluate the environmental performance of a CSP plant based on HYSOL technology using a Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) methodology while considering different locations. The scenarios investigated include different geographic locations (Spain, Chile, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, Mexico, and South Africa), an alternative modelling procedure for biomethane, and the use of natural gas as an alternative fuel. Results indicate that the geographic location has a significant influence on the environmental profile of the HYSOL CSP plant. The results obtained for the HYSOL configuration located in different countries presented significant differences (between 35% and 43%, depending on the category), especially in climate change and water stress categories. The differences are mainly attributable to the local availability of solar and water resources and composition of the national electricity mix. In addition, HYSOL technology performs significantly better when hybridizing with biomethane instead of natural gas. This evidence is particularly relevant in the climate change category, where biomethane hybridization emits 27.9–45.9 kg CO2 eq per MWh (depending on the biomethane modelling scenario) and natural gas scenario emits 264 kg CO2 eq/MWh.

Highlights

  • Concentrated Solar Power (CSP) uses lenses or mirrors to generate heat from solar radiation, which is employed to drive a conventional thermodynamic cycle for power generation

  • This study aims to compare the effect of using natural gas or biomethane as auxiliary fuels and to compare for the first time the environmental performance of a HYSOL CSP plant located in five countries around the world: Spain, Chile, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA), Mexico, and South Africa

  • The results show that the environmental categories with the highest significance in every are related to toxicity

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Summary

Introduction

Concentrated Solar Power (CSP) uses lenses or mirrors to generate heat from solar radiation, which is employed to drive a conventional thermodynamic cycle for power generation. Over 90% of the CSP capacity installed worldwide is located in two countries: Spain and the USA. In 2015, Spain accumulated around 2300 MWe in the form of 50 commercial power plants ranging in size between 10 and 50 MWe. Forty-five of these plants were based on parabolic trough technology, while three plants were based on central tower technology and two more on Fresnel solar collectors. CSP power capacity in the USA reached 1600 MWe in 2014 [1].

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