The Houston Chronicle , November 8,2022
By: James Osborne
The technology behind an experimental zero-emissions power plant operating near the Houston Ship Channel could soon be employed at a larger scale in West Texas’ Permian Basin.
The North Carolina startup Net Power on Monday announced plans to develop a 300-megawatt gas-fired power plant near Occidental Petroleum’s Permian Basin operations, calling it “the world’s first utility-scale natural gas-fired power plant with near-zero atmospheric emissions.”
Net Power is trying to secure financing for the project but said it has partnered with the oil field services company Baker Hughes and plans to have the plant in operation by 2026.
“Having demonstrated the capability of the technology at La Porte, and having partnered with Baker Hughes to commercialize the Net Power system, we are excited to accelerate the deployment of this game-changing technology,” Ron DeGregorio, CEO of Net Power, said in a statement. “This plant allows for the quick ramp-up in Net Power’s global deployments, providing a clear and meaningful pathway to near emission-free reliable power.”
Net Power employs a novel technology that burns natural gas along with pure oxygen to generate electricity, creating a pure stream of carbon dioxide. That avoids the need for costly carbon capture equipment that has sunk past zero-emissions power plant projects.
The company launched a demonstration projects in La Porte in 2018 and this year announced that it had secured a $100 million investment from the South Korean conglomerate SK Group.
Occidental, one of the Permian’s largest oil and gas producers, would be the plant’s primary customer, taking both the bulk of the plant’s power generation and its carbon dioxide.
Richard Jackson, president of U.S. onshore resources and carbon management at Occidental, said in a statement that the project would “accelerate plans to reduce carbon emissions” toward the company’s climate goals.
A spokesman for the project said it was not yet decided whether emissions from the power plant would be sequestered underground or used to aid in oil production, a practice that is employed frequently by Occidental in the Permian Basin but has attracted criticism from environmentalists.