http://www.reuters.com/article/environmentNews/idUSN1819484620071023HOUSTON (Reuters) - Much talked-about U.S. efforts to build a coal-fired power plant with near zero emissions are now concentrated in a single project, as the costs and difficulties of the endeavor have mounted and the stakes have risen.
FutureGen, a $1.5 billion public-private venture, aims to design and test the technology required to turn coal into a gas that can be stripped of harmful emissions, then burned to produce electricity and hydrogen. It will also capture carbon dioxide -- widely blamed for global warming -- and store it underground forever.
Plants that burn coal, already used to produce half the electricity consumed in the United States, were poised to make a major comeback after a decade of construction of less-polluting, natural gas-fired units. Dirtier coal regained its luster as a cheap power-plant fuel after gas prices soared in 2005 following two hurricanes that disrupted U.S. supply.
But increased worry about climate change and the potential for new laws to tax carbon emissions have created a backlash against new coal plants, which account for nearly 40 percent of all U.S. carbon dioxide emissions.
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