Life Cycle Assessment of Producing Electricity in Thailand: A Case Study of Natural Gas Power Plant

Environmental impacts from natural gas power plant in Thailand was investigated in this study. The objective was to identify the hotspot of environmental impact from electricity production and the allocation of emissions from power plant was studied. All stressors to environment were collected for a...

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Main Authors: Usapein Parnuwat, Chavalparit Orathai
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2017-01-01
Series:MATEC Web of Conferences
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1051/matecconf/201710305009
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spelling doaj-043c8092f530426f81111218c7980a372021-03-02T09:41:31ZengEDP SciencesMATEC Web of Conferences2261-236X2017-01-011030500910.1051/matecconf/201710305009matecconf_iscee2017_05009Life Cycle Assessment of Producing Electricity in Thailand: A Case Study of Natural Gas Power PlantUsapein Parnuwat0Chavalparit OrathaiRattanakosin College for Sustainable Energy and Environment, Rajamangala University of Technology RattanakosinEnvironmental impacts from natural gas power plant in Thailand was investigated in this study. The objective was to identify the hotspot of environmental impact from electricity production and the allocation of emissions from power plant was studied. All stressors to environment were collected for annual natural gas power plant operation. The allocation of environmental load between electricity and steam was done by WRI/WBCSD method. Based on the annual power plant operation, the highest of environmental impact was fuel combustion, followed by natural gas extraction, and chemical reagent. After allocation, the result found that 1 kWh of electricity generated 0.425 kgCO2eq and 1 ton of steam generated 225 kgCO2eq. When compared based on 1GJ of energy product, the result showed that the environmental impact of electricity is higher than steam product. To improve the environmental performance, it should be focused on the fuel combustion, for example, increasing the efficiency of gas turbine, and using low sulphur content of natural gas. This result can be used as guideline for stakeholder who engage with the environmental impact from power plant; furthermore, it can be useful for policy maker to understand the allocation method between electricity and steam products.https://doi.org/10.1051/matecconf/201710305009
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Usapein Parnuwat
Chavalparit Orathai
spellingShingle Usapein Parnuwat
Chavalparit Orathai
Life Cycle Assessment of Producing Electricity in Thailand: A Case Study of Natural Gas Power Plant
MATEC Web of Conferences
author_facet Usapein Parnuwat
Chavalparit Orathai
author_sort Usapein Parnuwat
title Life Cycle Assessment of Producing Electricity in Thailand: A Case Study of Natural Gas Power Plant
title_short Life Cycle Assessment of Producing Electricity in Thailand: A Case Study of Natural Gas Power Plant
title_full Life Cycle Assessment of Producing Electricity in Thailand: A Case Study of Natural Gas Power Plant
title_fullStr Life Cycle Assessment of Producing Electricity in Thailand: A Case Study of Natural Gas Power Plant
title_full_unstemmed Life Cycle Assessment of Producing Electricity in Thailand: A Case Study of Natural Gas Power Plant
title_sort life cycle assessment of producing electricity in thailand: a case study of natural gas power plant
publisher EDP Sciences
series MATEC Web of Conferences
issn 2261-236X
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Environmental impacts from natural gas power plant in Thailand was investigated in this study. The objective was to identify the hotspot of environmental impact from electricity production and the allocation of emissions from power plant was studied. All stressors to environment were collected for annual natural gas power plant operation. The allocation of environmental load between electricity and steam was done by WRI/WBCSD method. Based on the annual power plant operation, the highest of environmental impact was fuel combustion, followed by natural gas extraction, and chemical reagent. After allocation, the result found that 1 kWh of electricity generated 0.425 kgCO2eq and 1 ton of steam generated 225 kgCO2eq. When compared based on 1GJ of energy product, the result showed that the environmental impact of electricity is higher than steam product. To improve the environmental performance, it should be focused on the fuel combustion, for example, increasing the efficiency of gas turbine, and using low sulphur content of natural gas. This result can be used as guideline for stakeholder who engage with the environmental impact from power plant; furthermore, it can be useful for policy maker to understand the allocation method between electricity and steam products.
url https://doi.org/10.1051/matecconf/201710305009
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