Guest guest Posted May 10, 2007 Report Share Posted May 10, 2007 An environment blog from Tuesday, May 08, 2007 Fred's footprint: A can-load of energy I wanted to find out where the aluminium in my beer can came from. And I ended up in Gladstone in Queensland, Australia, one of the greenhouse-gas emissions hubs of the world. Smelting aluminium is one of the most energy-hungry industrial activities on the planet. It uses 2% of the world's electricity. In Gladstone, one of the world's biggest mining companies extracts the metal from the ore bauxite. This is mined across the state at Weipa, where 10% of the world's bauxite is stripped from land that used to be native bush. Most aluminium smelters use hydroelectricity. But Rio Tinto gets its power from a 30-year-old power station in the town that burns cheap Queensland coal. In Gladstone, the bauxite arrives by barges which thread their way around the Great Barrier Reef. First it is refined into aluminium oxide - alumina. Then the alumina goes to one of three giant smelting halls, each 900 metres long. Stepping into an aluminium smelter is like going back to an earlier industrial era. " The Hall-Herout smelting process is virtually unchanged since it was invented in the 1880s, " production manager Alan Milne told me. The process heats the alumina to almost 1000° C and then subjects it to an immense electric current delivered through thousands of carbon anodes, each weighing more than one tonne. The current strips the oxygen from the alumina and combines it with the carbon from the anodes. Result: pure aluminium ingots and a great deal of carbon dioxide gas. Combining the CO2 emissions from the smelting and the 900 megawatts of coal-fired power needed to sustain the process, you get 17 tonnes of CO2 for every tonne of aluminium. That's 270 grammes of CO2 per aluminium drinks can. Gladstone makes enough aluminium for almost 40 billion cans a year - six for every person on the planet. In doing that, it emits 10 million tonnes of CO2 a year - as much as a typical European city of one million people. Besides using one-fifth of the Queensland state's electricity, around the world, Rio Tinto smelters use one-sixth of New Zealand's power, a quarter of Tasmania's and a tenth of Wales's. Not surprisingly, Rio Tinto is growing worried about its CO2 emissions. They don't fit well with its new environmentally- and socially-aware image. And even though Australia is currently a Kyoto refusenik, the company reckons the government will soon sign up to future emissions reduction targets. So what is it doing? Last year it announced plans to build a new smelter in Abu Dhabi, powered by natural gas. Rio Tinto is not alone. As its managing director pointed out: " The Middle East is fast becoming a key region in the global aluminium smelting business. " Why so? It's a no-brainer. As the company's head of climate change told me when I asked about the new geography of aluminium smelting: " Abu Dhabi is outside the Kyoto protocol. " It has no emissions targets. Silly me. But don't despair. There could be salvation for the aluminium business. Its green credentials are not as bogus as you might imagine. Guess why. Answer in my next blog in a fortnight. Fred Pearce, senior environment correspondent " Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired, signifies in the final sense a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and are not clothed. " -- Dwight Eisenhower Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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