IPS, 6 June 2007 - Hydroelectricity is not as clean as most people might believe, because the reservoirs created by dams in tropical areas -- and in forested zones in particular -- emit greenhouse gases from the decomposition of organic material. But this downside can be turned into a benefit, and give a boost to the amount of energy generated.
Some hydroelectric plants in the Amazon hold an added energy capacity of 27 to 53 percent, taking into account the methane bubbles released from the water as it passes through the turbines and spillways, says Fernando Ramos, based on a study he and two colleagues from Brazils National Institute of Space Research (INPE) conducted at the Balbina, Samuel and Tucuruí dams.
But what his group proposes is to extract methane from the depths of the reservoirs, where there is a higher concentration of the gas.
With an investment of 100 million dollars, one million tonnes of
methane a year could be captured at Tucuruí, Brazils second largest
hydroelectric dam, located in the eastern Amazon. The return,
considering current prices of the gas, would reach 79 percent, much
higher than the 25 percent expected in other Brazilian renewable energy
projects.
A million tonnes of methane is the equivalent of 1,760 megawatts -- the
potential of a large hydroelectric dam -- and more energy than what
would be produced by the third nuclear plant under consideration for
construction in this country.
As such, methane could replace several hydroelectric dams planned for
the Amazon, and which are criticised by environmentalists because they
would flood extensive areas of forest and cause other environmental and
social problems.
The gas could be stored and transported for use in other areas, but the
best option would be to build a thermoelectric plant at the dam site,
taking advantage of the existing infrastructure to transmit the
electricity, Ramos said in an interview for this report. Furthermore,
it is a good way to avoid emissions of the gases that contribute to
climate change, which could generate carbon credits and make the
project more profitable.
"This technological idea would meet the criteria of the Clean
Development Mechanism (CDM)" established in the 1997 Kyoto Protocol on
climate change, and could enter the market of carbon credits, agreed
Pablo Fernández, manager of CDM project implementation at
EcoSecurities, though he admitted he is "not clear on how the methane
would be captured."
EcoSecurities is the company that put together the first Brazilian
project that obtained carbon credits, NovaGerar, which extracts gas
emissions from a huge garbage dump outside Rio de Janeiro to generate
energy.
INPEs Ramos, a mechanical engineer, said "there is no doubt about the
feasibility of the technique" for recovering methane from the dams,
given that the gas is released when the water passes through the
turbines and "pressure falls suddenly, producing bubbles," in a process
similar to opening a soda bottle.
The idea is to create a tubing system similar to a pool cleaner,
installed on a barge that would move about the reservoir, seeking the
areas of highest methane concentration.
The new task that the INPE group hopes to complete by the end of the
year is a pilot project to verify its economic viability, he announced.
It is "a new idea, not yet made official in the CDM," and needs to
"mature" in technical details and an inventory of the methane held in
the Brazilian reservoirs, Ramos acknowledged.
Other reservoirs, including those outside the Amazon region, could have
high concentrations of gas from organic material as well, he said.
The INPE scientists rule out trying to capture methane at the dam
turbines, because the electric companies dont want to install anything
that could alter the functioning of the dams. So the option is to
collect the methane before the water reaches the turbines.
However, Alexandre Kemenes, researcher with the Large-Scale
Biosphere-Atmosphere Experiment in the Amazon (LBA), proposes capturing
the gas released from the water "during and after its passage through
the turbines." It is more feasible, he said in an interview, because
the area will be limited and it would take advantage of existing
installations, and is better for the environment because it would also
permit carbon recovery.
Kemenes has already filed a patent request in Brazil and abroad for the
"system and method of biogas exploitation" that he designed. It speaks
of biogas because it makes use of the mix emitted in the turbines,
predominantly methane and carbon dioxide. At the Balbina dam in the
state of Amazonas, biogas is just 43 percent methane, and would have to
be enriched to be used in generating electricity, which requires a
minimum of 45 percent methane.
Balbina has gigantic potential, given that it emits gases that
represent 10 times what is contributed to global warming by a
thermoelectric plant of equal capacity, run on fossil fuels, or 10
percent of the emissions of Sao Paulo, Brazils largest and richest
metropolis, says Kemenes. 
(*This story is part of a series of features on sustainable development
by IPS - Inter Press Service, and IFEJ -- the International Federation
of Environmental Journalists.)
Inter Press Service News Agency (IPS).
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