ABSTRACT

Advances in Carbon Management Technologies

comprises 43 chapters contributed by experts from all over the world. Volume 1 of the book, containing 23 chapters, discusses the status of technologies capable of yielding substantial reduction of carbon dioxide emissions from major combustion sources. Such technologies include renewable energy sources that can replace fossil fuels and technologies to capture CO2 after fossil fuel combustion or directly from the atmosphere, with subsequent permanent long-term storage. The introductory chapter emphasizes the gravity of the issues related to greenhouse gas emissionglobal temperature correlation, the state of the art of key technologies and the necessary emission reductions needed to meet international warming targets. Section 1 deals with global challenges associated with key fossil fuel mitigation technologies, including removing CO2 from the atmosphere, and emission measurements. Section 2 presents technological choices for coal, petroleum, and natural gas for the purpose of reducing carbon footprints associated with the utilization of such fuels. Section 3 deals with promising contributions of alternatives to fossil fuels, such as hydropower, nuclear, solar photovoltaics, and wind.

Chapter 19 of this book is freely available as a downloadable Open Access PDF at https://www.taylorfrancis.com under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC-BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license. 

section Section 1|115 pages

Global and Regional Views of Carbon Management

section Section 2|259 pages

Fossil Sector: Coal/Petroleum/Natural Gas

chapter Chapter 7|15 pages

Carbon Mitigation in the Power Sector

Challenges and Opportunities

chapter Chapter 15|21 pages

Chemicals from Coal

A Smart Choice

section Section 3|74 pages

Wind/Solar/Hydro/Nuclear

chapter Chapter 18|11 pages

Nuclear Energy, the Largest Source of CO2 Free Energy

Issues and Solutions

chapter Chapter 20|18 pages

Solar Photovoltaic Technologies and Systems

chapter Chapter 21|8 pages

Reducing the Carbon Footprint of Wind Energy

What Can Be Learned from Life-Cycle Studies?

chapter Chapter 22|18 pages

Hydropower

A Low-Carbon Power Source