Carbon Capture by Fossil Fuel Power Plants: An Economic Analysis
39 Pages Posted: 23 Jul 2009 Last revised: 25 May 2013
There are 2 versions of this paper
Carbon Capture by Fossil Fuel Power Plants: An Economic Analysis
Carbon Capture by Fossil Fuel Power Plants: An Economic Analysis
Date Written: December 19, 2009
Abstract
For fossil fuel power plants to be built in the future, carbon capture and storage (CCS) technologies offer the potential for significant reductions in CO2 emissions. We examine the break-even value for CCS adoptions, that is, the critical value in the charge for CO2 emissions that would justify investment in CCS capabilities. Our analysis takes explicitly into account that the supply of electricity at the wholesale level (generation) is organized competitively in some U.S. jurisdictions, while in others a regulated utility provides integrated generation and distribution services. For either market structure, we find that emissions charges in the range of $25-$30 per tonne of CO2 would be the break-even value for adopting CCS capabilities at new coal-fired power plants. The corresponding break-even values for natural gas plants are substantially higher, near $60 per tonne. Our break-even estimates serve as a basis for projecting the change in electricity prices once carbon emissions become costly. CCS capabilities effectively put an upper bound on the rise in electricity prices. We estimate this bound to be near 30% at the retail level for both coal and natural gas plants. In contrast to the competitive power supply scenario, however, these price increases materialize only gradually for a regulated utility. The delay in price adjustments reflects that for regulated firms the basis for setting product prices is historical cost, rather than current cost.
Keywords: Cost accounting, regulations, environmental protection
JEL Classification: Q3, Q4
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Depreciation Rules and the Relation Between Marginal and Historical Cost
-
Depreciation Rules and the Relation Between Marginal and Historical Cost
-
Macroeconomic Variables and the E/P Ratio
By Prem C. Jain and Joshua G. Rosett
-
Carbon Capture by Fossil Fuel Power Plants: An Economic Analysis
-
Unbiased Accounting Considering Profitability
By Martin Staehle and Niklas Lampenius
-
Are PE- and MB-Ratios Susceptible to Accruals, Growth, or Profitability?
By Martin Staehle and Niklas Lampenius
-
Accrual Accounting, Informational Sufficiency, and Equity Valuation
-
Stock Market Reaction to Green Vehicle Innovation
By Sulin Ba, Ling Lei Lisic, ...
-
Remanufacturing, Third-Party Competition, and Consumers' Perceived Value of New Products
By Vishal Agrawal, Atalay Atasu, ...