CDA U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Industrial Environmental Research PDA fiOD/7 7fi IZl /A Office of Research and Development Laboratory Cincinnati.Ohio 45268 December 1976 ENVIRONMENTAL CONSIDERATIONS OF SELECTED ENERGY CONSERVING MANUFACTURING PROCESS OPTIONS: Vol. VII. Ammonia Industry Report Interagency Energy-Environment Research and Development Program Report ------- RESEARCH REPORTING SERIES Research reports of the Office of Research and Development, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, have been grouped into seven series. These seven broad categories were established to facilitate further development and application of environmental technology. Elimination of traditional grouping was consciously planned to foster technology transfer and a maximum interface in related fields. The seven series are: 1. Environmental Health Effects Research 2. Environmental Protection Technology 3. Ecological Research 4. Environmental Monitoring 5. Socioeconomic Environmental Studies 6. Scientific and Technical Assessment Reports (STAR) 7. Interagency Energy-Environment Research and Development This report has been assigned to the INTERAGENCY ENERGY-ENVIRONMENT RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT series. Reports in this series result from the effort funded under the 17-agency Federal Energy/Environment Research and Development Program. These studies relate to EPA's mission to protect the public health and welfare from adverse effects of pollutants associated with energy systems. The goal of the Program is to assure the rapid development of domestic energy supplies in an environmentally—compatible manner by providing the necessary environmental data and control technology. Investigations include analyses of the transport of energy-related pollutants and their health and ecological effects; assessments of, and development of, control technologies for energy systems; and integrated assessments of a wide range of energy-related environmental issues. This document ""is available to the public .through the National Technical Information Service, Springfield, Virginia 22161. ------- EPA-600/7-76-034g December 1976 ENVIRONMENTAL CONSIDERATIONS OF SELECTED ENERGY CONSERVING MANUFACTURING PROCESS OPTIONS Volume VII AMMONIA INDUSTRY REPORT EPA Contract No. 68-03-2198 Project Officer Herbert S. Skovronek Industrial Pollution Control Division Industrial Environmental Research Laboratory - Cincinnati Edison, New Jersey 08817 •INDUSTRIAL ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LABORATORY OFFICE OF RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT U.S. ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY CINCINNATI, OHIO 45268 ------- DISCLAIMER This report has been reviewed by the Industrial Environmental Research Laboratory, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, and approved for publica- tion. Approval does not signify that the contents necessarily reflect the views and policies of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, nor does mention of trade names or commercial products constitute endorsement or recommendation for use. ii ------- FOREWORD When energy and material resources are extracted, processed, converted, and used, the related pollutional impacts on our environment and even on our health often require that new and increasingly more efficient pollution con- trol methods be used. The Industrial Environmental Research Laboratory - Cincinnati (IBRL-Ci) assists in developing and demonstrating new and im- proved methodologies that will meet these needs both efficiently and economically. This study, consisting of 15 reports, identifies promising industrial processes and practices in 13 energy-intensive industries which, if imple- mented over the coming 10 to 15 years, could result in more effective uti- lization of energy resources. The study was carried out to assess the po- tential environmental/energy impacts of such changes and the adequacy of existing control technology in order to identify potential conflicts with environmental regulations and to alert the Agency to areas where its activi- ties and policies could influence the future choice of alternatives. The results will be used by the EPA's Office of Research and Development to de- fine those areas where existing pollution control technology suffices, where current and anticipated programs adequately address the areas identified by the contractor, and where selected program reorientation seems necessary. Specific data will also be of considerable value to individual researchers as industry background and in decision-making concerning project selection and direction. The Power Technology and Conservation Branch of the Energy Systems-Environmental Control Division should be contacted for additional information on the program. David G. Stephan Director Industrial Environmental Research Laboratory Cincinnati iii ------- EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Natural gas is the basic feedstock for virtually all ammonia production in the United States. Construction of new ammonia plants to meet demand is becoming increasingly difficult because of the shortage of natural gas. If this short- age persists, the ammonia industry will be forced to implement the use of alternate feedstocks, such as coal and heavy fuel oil, in 50 to 100 percent of new plant construction from 1985 forward, and one or two new plants may even be built prior to that time. Such plants are not commercial in the United States at present and, thus, will constitute a major process change. Also, such plants are likely to have pollution problems significantly greater than present plants. Therefore, we chose to analyze the process options of: • ammonia production based upon coal gasification; and, • ammonia production based upon heavy oil gasification. As a guide for interpreting the energy and pollution effects of changing feedstocks upon the economics of manufacturing ammonia, we have estimated typical investments and operating costs of new plants using natural gas, coal and heavy fuel oil feedstocks, based upon conditions prevailing during March 1975. The coal and heavy oil alternatives are not economically attractive under the conditions chosen for our evaluations in this study. If the price of natural gas to the ammonia industry were to rise from the $0.85 per million Btu (used in this study) to approximately $2.50 per million Btu, the calculated ammonia costs would rise from our estimated $98 per ton of ammonia to $153 per ton. This would change the economic attractiveness of the coal- and heavy oil-based alternatives. Significant incremental capital investment above that of plants based upon natural gas (which is on the order of $186 per annual ton of ammonia) is involved in the alternative processes, as high as $111 per annual ton of ammonia capacity for the coal alternative and $21 per annual ton for the heavy fuel oil alternative. Incremental production costs of $17 per ton of ammonia, which includes $8.65 per ton for pollution abatement, are expected for the coal alternative. The corresponding incremental cost for the heavy fuel oil alternative is $45 per ton of ammonia, which includes $3.46 for pol- lution abatement. The investment required for a coal- or heavy oil-based plant is higher than that for one based on natural gas. Nevertheless, when faced with a continuing shortage of natural gas, the industry will have to find other fuel and feedstocks. IV ------- The needed pollution control technology will mean an expenditure of energy equivalent to 165,000 Btu per ton of ammonia for the coal alternative, and a 0.5 percent increase in the total energy required for ammonia produc- tion. Approximately 125,000 Btu are required for pollution control for the heavy fuel oil alternative, corresponding to a 0.2 percent increase in energy consumption. Thus, the relative incremental fuel use is negligible, while the fuel form savings are significant. While the environmental impact could be significant for these alterna- tives, there are no unique problems which will be encountered by new ammonia plants basing production on coal and heavy fuel oil feedstocks. Difficulties will be no greater than those encountered in electric power generation or in industrial boilers fired with these fuels. However, the need to address these difficulties at industrial plants will be a new experience. This report was submitted in partial fulfillment of contract 68-03-2198 by Arthur D. Little, Inc. under sponsorship of the U.S. Environmental Protec- tion Agency. This report covers a period from June 9, 1975 to January 20, 1976. ------- TABLE OF CONTENTS Page FOREWORD i:Li EXECUTIVE SUMMARY iv List of Figures .: List of Tables * Acknowledgments x±ii Conversion Table xv I. INTRODUCTION 1 A. BACKGROUND 1 B. CRITERIA FOR INDUSTRY SELECTION 1 C. CRITERIA FOR PROCESS SELECTION 3 D. SELECTION OF AMMONIA INDUSTRY PROCESS OPTIONS 3 II. FINDINGS, CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS 6 A. AMMONIA FROM COAL 6 1. Environmental Aspects 6 2. Areas Where EPA Policies May Influence Future Choices of Alternatives 6 3. Practices/Processes Requiring Additional Research 6 B. AMMONIA FROM HEAVY FUEL OIL 7 1. Environmental Aspects 7 2. EPA Policies and Requirements for Additional Research 7 III. OVERVIEW OF THE UNITED STATES AMMONIA INDUSTRY 10 A. DESCRIPTION OF INDUSTRY 10 1. Introduction 10 2. Plant Characteristics 13 3. Integration and Concentration 15 B. ECONOMIC OUTLOOK 16 IV. COMPARISON OF CURRENT AND ALTERNATIVE PROCESSES 20 A. REASONS FOR CHOOSING OPTIONS FOR IN-DEPTH ANALYSIS 20 B. COMPARISON OF CURRENT AND ALTERNATIVE PROCESSES 22 1. Methodology 22 2. Ammonia Production Based on Natural Gas 25 3. Ammonia Production Based on Coal Gasification 37 4. Production of Ammonia from Heavy Fuel Oil 66 vii ------- TABLE OF CONTENTS (Cent.) Page V. IMPLICATIONS OF POTENTIAL INDUSTRY/PROCESS CHANGE 80 A. AMMONIA FROM COAL 82 1. Impact on Pollution Control 82 2. Impact on Energy 84 3. Factors Affecting Probability of Change 84 4. Areas of Research 84 B. AMMONIA FROM PETROLEUM 86 1. Impact On Pollution Control 86 2. Impact on Energy 86 3. Factors Affecting Probability of Change 86 4. Areas of Research 87 viii ------- LIST OF FIGURES Number Page •III-l Market Share of Major U.S. Synthetic Ammonia Producers, ]974 15 IV-1 Flow Diagram for Synthesizing Ammonia by Steam-Reforming Process 26 IV-2 Ammonia Production Based on Natural Gas Feedstock 30 IV-3 Coal Receiving and Preparation 48 IV-4 Gasification 48 IV-5 Carbon Monoxide Shift and Synthesis Gas Purification 49 IV-6 Sulfur Recovery 49 IV-7 Ammonia Synthesis 50 IV-8 Auxiliary Boiler 50 IV-9 Capital Investments - Glaus Plant 64 IV-10 Synthesis Gas Generation Including Recovery of Unconverted Carbon 69 IV-11 Carbon Monoxide Shift and Synthesis Gas Purification 72 IV-12 Sulfur Recovery 73 IV-13 Ammonia Synthesis 73 V-l Effect of Natural Gas 'and Coal Prices Upon Ammonia Prices 85 V-2 Effect of Natural Gas and Residual Fuel Oil Prices Upon Ammonia Prices 87 ix ------- LIST OF TABLES Number Page 1-1 Summary of 1971 Energy Purchased in Selected Industry Sectors 2 II-l Comparison of Base line and Alternative Processes 8 II-2 Air, Water, and Solid Waste Streams from Base Case and Alternative Fuel Systems and Process Modifications 9 III-l Synthetic Ammonia - U.S. Production History 11 III-2 Uses and Sources of Ammonia - 1974 11 III-3 1973 Energy Use for Ammonia Manufacture 12 III-4 Age of Amonia Plants Operating at Beginning of 1976 13 III-5 Anhydrous Ammonia Capacity by Region in 1974 14 III-6 Fertilizer Nitrogen Consumption 16 III-7 Projected U.S. Nitrogen Supply/Demand Balance 17 III-8 Change in the Economics of Ammonia Manufacture 19 IV-1 Benchmark Energy Costs for Coal, Oil, Gas and Electric Power 24 IV-2 Benchmark Employee Earnings 24 IV-3 Estimated Production Cost of Ammonia from Natural Gas 27 IV-4 Energy Use in Ammonia Production • 29 IV-5 Natural Gas Consumption in Ammonia Production 29 IV-6 1973 Regional Fuel and Power Use: Ammonia 30 IV-7 Emissions from Ammonia Plants Based on Natural Gas 31 IV-8 Estimated Energy Impact for Ammonia Production of Current Pollution Control Regulations 32 IV-9 Water Effluent Treatment Costs - Ammonia Plants 33 IV-10 Water Pollution Control Costs ($) Ammonia/Condensate Steam Stripping 34 A ------- LIST OP TABLES (Cont.) Number Page IV-11 Example Cost of Ammonia Scrubbing 36 IV-12 Ammonia Plants Based on Gasification of Coal 38 IV-13 Gasification System 40 .IV-14 Estimated Production Cost of Ammonia from Coal 46 IV-15 Analysis of Illinois No. 6 Coal 47 IV-16 Water Effluents - Ammonia from Coal Alternative 51 IV-1? Air Emissions -.Ammonia from Coal Alternative 51 IV-18 Solid Wastes - Ammonia from Coal Alternative 52 IV-19 Elemental Distribution in Coal, Slag, and Fly Ash 54 IV-20 Coal Gasification Alternative - Wastewater Treatment Cost Estimates 59 IV-21 Summary of Air Pollution Emission Factors 61 IV-22 Capital and Operating Costs for Coal Handling Particulate Control 63 IV-23 Approximate Sulfur Balance, TPD 64 IV-24 Sulfur Control Costs for Acid Gas Exhaust 65 IV-25 Estimated Production Cost of Ammonia from Residual Fuel Oil 70 IV-26 Water Effluents - Ammonia from Heavy Oil Alternative 74 IV-27 Air Emissions - Ammonia from Heavy Oil Alternative 74 IV-28 Solid Wastes - Ammonia from Heavy Oil Alternative 74 IV-29 Soot Recycle System Slowdown 76 IV-30 Oil Gasification Alternative Incremental Wastewater Treatment Cost Estimates 77 IV-31 Sulfur Control Costs for Acid Gas Exhaust Oil Gasification Alternative 79 XI ------- LIST OF TABLES (Cont.) Number Page V-l Capital Investment Summary for Environmental Control 83 V-2 Annual Incremental Operating Cost Summary for Environmental Control 83 V-3 Energy Consumption Summary for Environmental Control 85 xii ------- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS This study could not have been accomplished without the support of a great number of people in government agencies, industry, trade associations and universities. Although it would be impossible to mention each individual by name, we would like to take this opportunity to acknowledge the particular support of a few such people. Dr. Herbert S. Skovronek, Project Officer, was a valuable resource to us throughout the study. He not only supplied us with information on work presently being done in other branches of EPA and other government agencies, but served as an indefatigable guide and critic as the study progressed. His advisors within EPA, FEA, DOC, and NBS also provided us with insights and perspectives valuable for the shaping of the study. During the course of the study we also had occasion to contact many individuals within industry and trade associations. Where appropriate we have made reference to these contacts within the various reports. Frequently, however, because of the study's emphasis on future developments with compara- tive assessments of new technology, information given to us was of a confiden- tial nature or was supplied to us with the understanding that it was not to be credited. Therefore, we extend a general thanks to all those whose comments were valuable to us for their interest in and contribution to this study. Finally, because of the broad range of industries covered in this study, we are indebted to many people within Arthur D. Little, Inc. for their parti- cipation. Responsible for the guidance and completion of the overall study were Mr. Henry E. Haley, Project Manager; Dr. Charles L. Kusik, Technical Director; Mr. James I. Stevens, Environmental Coordinator; and Ms. Anne B. Littlef ield, Administrative Coordinator. Members of the environmental team were Dr. Indrakumar L. Jashnani, Mr. Edmund H. Dohnert and Dr. Richard Stephens (consultant). Within the individual industry studies we would like to acknowledge the contributions of the following people. Iron and Steel: Dr. Michel R. Mounier, Principal Investigator Dr. Krishna Parameswaran Petroleum Refining; Mr. R. Peter Stickles, Principal Investigator Mr. Edward Interess Mr. Stephen A. Reber Dr. James Kittrell (consultant) Dr. Leigh Short (consultant) xiii ------- Pulp and Paper: Olefins: Ammonia: Aluminum: Textiles: Cement: Glass: Chlor-Alkali: Phosphorus/ Phosphoric Acid; Primary Copper: Fertilizers: Mr. Fred D. Lannazzi, Principal Investigator Mr. Donald B. Sparrow Mr. Edward Myskowski (consultant) Mr. Karl P. Fagans Mr. G. E. Wong Mr. Stanley E. Dale, Principal Investigator Mr. R. Peter Stickles Mr. J. Kevin O'Neill Mr. George B. Hegeman Mr. John L. Sherff, Principal Investigator Ms. Nancy J. Cunningham Mr. Harry W. Lambe Mr. Richard W. Hyde, Principal Investigator Ms. Anne B. Littlefield Dr. Charles L. Kusik Mr* Edward L. Pepper Mr. Edwin L. Field Mr, John W. Rafferty Dr. Douglas Shooter, Principal Investigator Mr* Robert M. Green (consultant) Mr* Edward S, Shanley Dr, John Willard (consultant) Drs Richard F. Heitmiller Dr. Paul A. Huska, Principal Investigator Ms. Anne B. Littlefield Mr.. J.. Kevin O'Neill Dr. D. William Lee, Principal Investigator Mr, Michael Rossetti Mr, R, Peter Stickles Mr * Edward Interess Dr, Ravindra M. Nadkarni Mr. Roger E. Shamel, Principal Investigator Mr. Harry W. Lambe Mr^ Richard P. Schneider Mr. William V. Keary, Principal Investigator Mr. Harry W. Lambe Mr. George C. Sweeney Dr., Krishna Parameswaran Dr. Ravindra M. Nadkarni, Principal Investigator Dr, Michel R. Mounier Dr. Krishna Parameswaran Mr. John L, Sherff, Principal Investigator Mr. Roger Shamel Dr. Indrakumar L. Jashnani xiv ------- ENGLISH-METRIC (SI) CONVERSION FACTORS To Convert From To Metre2 Pascal Metre3 .t Joule Pascal-second Degree Celsius Degree Kelvin Metre Metre /sec 3 Metre 2 Metre Metre/sec 2 Metre /sec i) Metre3 Ibf/sec) Watt .c) Watt Watt Metre Joule 3 Metre Metre Metre Metre Pascal-second t Newton Kilogram Kilogram Kilogram Kilogram Kilogram Kilogram Multiply By 4,046 101,325 0.1589 1,055 0.001 t"c = (t° -32)/1.8 0.3048 0.0004719 0.02831 0.09290 0.3048 0.00002580 0.003785 745.7 746.0 735.5 0.02540 3.60 x 106 1.000 x 10~3 1.000 x 10~6 0.00002540 1,609 0.1000 4.448 0.4536 0.02916 1,016 1,000 907.1 1,000 Acre Atmosphere (normal) Barrel (42 gal) British Thermal Unit Centipoise Degree Fahrenheit Degree Rankine Foot Foot /minute 3 Foot 2 Foot Foot/sec 2 Foot /hr Gallon (U.S. liquid) Horsepower (550 ft-1 Horsepower (electric) Horsepower (metric) Inch Kilowatt-hour Litre Micron Mil Mile (U.S. statute) Poise Pound force (avdp) Pound mass (avdp) Ton (assay) Ton (long) Ton (metric) Ton (short) Tonne Source: American National Standards Institute, "Standard Metric Practice Guide," March 15, 1973. (ANS72101-1973) (ASTM Designation E380-72) xv ------- I. INTRODUCTION A. BACKGROUND Industry in the United States purchases about 27 quads* annually, approxi- mately 40% of total national energy usage.** This energy is in the form of feedstocks, chemical reactions, space cooling and heating, process stream heat- ing, and miscellaneous other purposes. In many industrial sectors energy consumption can be reduced significantly by better "housekeeping" (i.e., shutting off standby furnaces, better thermo- stat control, elimination of steam and heat leaks, etc.) and greater emphasis on optimization of energy usage. In addition, however, industry can be expected to introduce new industrial practices or processes either to conserve energy or to take advantage of a more readily available or less costly fuel. Such changes in industrial practices may result in changes in air, water or solid waste discharges. The EPA is interested in identifying the pollution loads of such new energy-conserving industrial practices or processes and in determin- ing where additional research, development, or demonstration is needed to char- acterize and control the effluent streams. B. CRITERIA FOR INDUSTRY SELECTION In the first phase of this study we identified industry sectors that have a potential for change, emphasizing those changes which have an environmental/ energy impact. Industries were eliminated from further consideration within this assign- ment if the only changes that could be envisioned were: • energy conservation as a result of better policing or "housekeeping," • better waste heat utilization, l • fuel switching in steam raising, or • power generation. *1 quad = 1015 Btu **Purchased electricity valued at an approximate fossil fuel equivalence of 10,500 Btu/kWh. ------- After discussions with the EPA Project Officer and his advisors, industry sectors were selected for further consideration and ranked using: • Quantitative criteria based on the gross amount of energy (fossil fuel and electric) purchased by industry sector as found in U.S. Census figures and on information provided from industry sources. The ammonia industry purchased 0.63 quads out of the 12.14 quads purchased in 1971 by the 13 industries selected for study, or 2% of the 27 quads purchased by all industry (see Table 1-1). • Qualitative criteria relating to probability and potential for proc- ess change, and the energy and effluent consequences of such changes. In order to allow for as broad a coverage of technologies as possible, we then reviewed the ranking, eliminating some industries in which the process changes to be studied were similar to those in another industry planned for study. We believe the final ranking resulting from these considerations identi- fies those industry sectors which show the greatest possibility of energy con- servation via process change. Further .details on this selection process can be found in the Industry Priority Report prepared under this contract (Volume II). On the basis of this ranking method, the ammonia industry appeared in fourth place among the 13 industrial sectors listed. TABLE 1-1 SUMMARY OF 1971 ENERGY PURCHASED IN SELECTED INDUSTRY SECTORS SIC Code . c In Which Industry Sector 10 Btu/Yr Industry Found 1. Blase furnaces and steel mills 3.49(1) 3312 2. Petroleum refining 2.96(2' 2911 3. Paper and allied products 1.59 26 4. Oleflns 0.984*3' 2818 5. Ammonia 0.63**' 287 6. Aluminum 0.59 3334 7. Textiles 0.54 22 8. Cement 0.52 3241 9. Glass 0.31 3211, 3221, 3229 10. Alkalies and chlorine 0.24 2812 11. Phosphorus and phosphoric ,,, acid production 0.12W 2819 12. Primary copper 0.081 3331 13. Fertilizers (excluding ammonia) 0.078 287 Estimate for 1967 reported by FEA Project Independence Blueprint, p. 6-2, USGPO, November 1974. Includes captive consumption (FEA Project Independence Blueprint) ) (4) 'includes captive consumption of energy from process byproducts ( Oleflns only, includes energy of feedstocks: ADL estimates Amonia feedstock energy included: ADL estimates *5)AI>L estimates Source: 1972 Census of Manufactures, EPA Project Independence Blueprint, USGPO, November 1974, and ADL estimates. ------- C. CRITERIA FOR PROCESS SELECTION In this study we have focused on identifying changes in the primary pro- duction processes which have clearly defined pollution consequences. In select- ing those to be included in this study, we have considered the needs and limita- tions of the EPA as discussed more completely in the Industry Priority Report mentioned above. Specifically, energy conservation has been defined broadly to include, in addition to process changes, conservation of energy or energy form (gas, oil, coal) by a process or feedstock change. Natural gas has been considered as having the highest energy form value followed in descending order by oil, electric power, and coal. Thus, a switch from gas to electric power would be considered energy conservation because electric power could be gener- ated from coal, existing in abundant reserves in the United States in comparison to natural gas. Moreover, pollution control methods resulting in energy con- servation have been included within the scope of this study. Finally, emphasis has been placed on process changes with near-term rather than long-term poten- tial within the 15-year span of time of this study. In addition to excluding from consideration better waste heat utilization, "housekeeping," power generation, and fuel switching, as mentioned above, cer- tain options have been excluded to avoid duplicating work being funded under other contracts and to focus this study more strictly on "process changes." Consequently, the following have also not been considered to be within the scope of work: • Carbon monoxide boilers (however, unique process vent streams yield- ing recoverable energy could be mentioned); • Fuel substitution in fired process heaters; • Mining and'milling, agriculture, and animal husbandry; • Substitution of scrap (such as iron, aluminum, glass, reclaimed tex- tile, and paper) for virgin materials; • Production of synthetic fuels from coal (low- and high-Btu gas, synthetic crude, synthetic fuel oil, etc.); and • All aspects of industry-related transportation (such as transporta- tion of raw material). ( D. SELECTION OF AMMONIA INDUSTRY PROCESS OPTIONS Within each industry, the magnitude of energy use was an important criterion in judging where the most significant energy savings might be realized, since reduction in energy use reduces the amount of pollution generated in the energy production step. Guided by this consideration, candidate options for in-depth analysis were identified from the major energy consuming process steps with known or potential environmental problems. ------- After developing a list of candidate process options, we assessed sub- j ectively • pollution or environmental consequences of the process change, • probability or potential for the change, and > • energy conservation consequences of the change. Even though all of the candidate process options were large energy users,.. there was wide variation in energy use and estimated pollution loads between options at the top and bottom of the list. A modest process change in a major energy consuming process step could have more dramatic energy consequences than a more technically significant process change in a process step whose energy consumption is rather modest. For the lesser energy-using process steps process options were selected for in-depth analysis only if a high probability for process change and pollution consequences were perceived. Because of the time and scope limitations for this study, we have not attempted to prepare a comprehensive list of process options or to consider •all economic, technological, institutional, legal or other factors affecting implementation of these changes. Instead we have relied on our own background experience, industry contacts, and the guidance of the Project Officer and EPA advisors to choose promising process options. The manufacture of ammonia is an integrated process, with subprocesses of: • producing a hydrogen-rich stream from a hydrocarbon or carbon source via reforming or partial oxidation, • gas purification, and • ammoniation. The primary raw material for ammonia in the United. States is natural gas, and about 95% of the ammonia manufactured in the United States is so produced. Within the ammonia industry, our first objective was to identify major energy issues and current and potential environmental problems. We have deter- mined that changes are being considered to increase the efficiency of natural gas processes and to utilize liquid hydrocarbons for a portion of the fuel requirements. Also, because of a shortage of natural gas, several companies are evaluating the option of producing ammonia from coal and liquid hydrocarbons. We foresee little pollution impact as a result of the changes to improve the conventional natural gas processes, the major one of which is preheating the inlet air. The major potential change will be seen in the new plants which, because' of a shortage of natural gas, may have to use coal or heavy fuel oil both for fuel and for feedstock. Such plants are not commercial in the United States ------- at present, so they will constitute a major process change. Also, such plants are likely to have pollution problems significantly greater than present plants. Therefore, we chose to analyze the process options: • ammonia production based upon coal gasification, and • ammonia production based upon heavy oil gasification. The industry description in Chapter III is based on 1974, the last representative year for which there was good statistical information. For each process, we evaluated capital and operating costs to pinpoint economic factors that would influence the adoption of new technology. Investment costs for the base case and for pollution control costs were also calculated on the same basis. Recognizing that capital investment and energy costs have escalated rapidly in the past few years and have greatly distorted the traditional basis for making cost comparisons, we believe that the most meaningful economic assessment of new process technology can only be made by •using 1975 cost data. Consequently, in estimating operating costs we developed costs representative of the first half of 1975, using constant 1975 dollars for our comparative analysis of new and current processes. In each case, we estimated capital and operating costs for pollution control systems expected to be capable of meeting existing EPA standards for ambient air quality (S0£ and particulates) and, for aqueous effluents, the "Best Available Technology." Our estimates were based on the assumption that the pollution control technologies would be adequate in achieving any standards for toxic and hazardous substances, such as trace heavy metals, since there is little or no data available on the probable magnitude of these problems. ------- II. FINDINGS, CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS A. AMMONIA FROM COAL 1. Environmental Aspects The problems associated with coal gasification are usually gaseous sulfur, non-methane hydrocarbons, wastewaters, ash, and slag. In mak- ing ammonia from gasified coal, sulfur must be removed for process reasons and, once removed, it can be handled in an environmentally acceptable manner by the addition of a sulfur recovery system. The hydrocarbons formed in the gasifier are limited to small quantities of methane. The methane, and any traces of higher hydrocarbons which do not take part in the synthesis, are removed from the ammonia loop in a purge stream which is used as supplemental fuel. The wastewater volume is less in this process than in other coal gasifica- tion processes, because the water is recycled to the reactor to provide steam. The components of the ash and slag are similar to those produced in normal industrial coal-fired boilers and are analogous in character, leachability, etc. There will be no unique problems for commercial ammonia plants based on coal feedstock in meeting the anticipated environmental standards. Difficulties will be no greater than those encountered in electric power generation or in industrial coal-fired boilers. 2. Areas Where EPA Policies May Influence Future Choices of Alternatives Use of strip-mined coal is attractive for this process alternative, because it provides a lower cost for the feedstock and the stripped area is a potential place in which to dispose of the large quantities of ash and slag. EPA's policy in developing ground rules related to strip mining will influence the trend of the ammonia industry in choosing feedstock and slag disposal methods and, thus, in determining the overall course of the industry. 3. Practices/Processes Requiring Additional Research In assessing the pollution aspects of the coal alternative, it is apparent that one of the foremost areas requiring research and development efforts is in the measurement and control of volatile materials found in coal, as well, as arsenic, boron, fluorine, lead, mercury, and so on. In addition, the control of volatile organic species with known or potential carcinogenic effects may present a problem area for research and development efforts. Research and development into the most environmentally acceptable method for the use or ------- disposal of the large amounts of solid residues (principally coal ash) should be undertaken to establish procedures and techniques that can be utilized to achieve realistic costs and benefits. B. AMMONIA FROM HEAVY FUEL OIL 1. Environmental Aspects As with the coal alternative, the significant potential environmental problem is associated with sulfur. Again, the sulfur must be removed for proc- ess reasons by the addition of a sulfur recovery plant and results in byproduct sulfur. The process wastewater is treatable in a conventional biological treat- ment plant. Therefore, there will be no unique problems for commercial ammonia plants based on oil feedstock in meeting the anticipated environmental standards. 2. EPA Policies and Requirements for Additional Research Since the cost for environmental control will not be a significant problem and because the technology is in use, we anticipate little need for policy changes or research on the part of EPA. ------- TABLE II-l COMPARISON OF BASE LINE AND ALTERNATIVE PROCESSES Environmental Incremental Pollution Control costs ($/ton of product). Comments Natural Gas1 (Base Case) Costs comparable for ammonia syn- thesis section of base case and each alternative. Coal Gasification2 8.65 Slag disposal, coal-pile run- off treatment and syngap puri- fication wastewater. Heavy Oil Gasification3 3.46 Syngas purification and soot recycle purge wastewaters. Energy 00 Consumption (10 Btu/ ton of product). Comments Process Economics Investment ($ millions) Pollution Control and Operating Cost ($/ton of product)** Comments Details found in Tables IV-3, '4,' 5, 8, 10, and 11. 37 Includes natural gas for feedstock and fuel with small amount of electrical power. (Approximately 1% for pollution control). 63.4 98.18 Based on natural gas at $0.85/106 Btu. (Expected to increase to $2.50 in future). 2., •Details found in Tables IV-14, £0, 22, and 24. 3 Details found in Tables IV-25, 30, and 31. * Not determined but estimated at <$2.00/ton of product. ** Includes pretax return on investment. 36 Approximately 0.5% increase for pol- lution control (0.17 x 106 Btu/ton). 101.1 146.07 Based on $15.40/ ton of coal ($0.71/106 Btu). 35.4 Approximately 0.4% increase for pol- lution control (0.13 x 106 Btu/ ton) . 70.6 151.14 Based on $1.90/ 106 Btu for high sulfur fuel oil and $2.40 for low sulfur oil. ------- TABLE II-2 AIR, WATER, AND SOLID WASTE STREAMS FROM BASE CASE AND ALTERNATIVE FUEL SYSTEMS AND PROCESS MODIFICATIONS Process Alternative • Natural gas (base case) Air Emission Synthesis loop purge. Product loading emission. Water Effluent Streams Raw water treatment plant effluent. Cooling tower blowdown. Boiler blowdownT Compressor blowdowni Process condensate. Solid Waste Stiift converter catalyst, Ammonia converter catalyst. • Coal gasification Emissions as listed in base case above. Coal handling emissions. Syngas purification emissions Claus plant tail gas cleanup vent. Byproduct molten sulfur storage & transfer emissions System vents for pressure let-down. Effluents as listed in base case above. Coal, ash and slag pile runoff. Wastewater from Rectisol Unit Wastewater from sulfur recovery plant tail gas cleanup. Solid wastes as listed in base case above. Slag. Catalyst from CO shift. Molten sulfur. Heavy oil gasification Emissions as listed in base I Effluents as listed in base case above. case above. Syngas purification emissions Soot recycle system purge, Claus plant tail gas clean- Wastewater from syngas puri- up vent. I fication- Byproduct molten sulfur Wastewater from sulfur recovery storage & transfer emissions) plant tail gas cleanup . System vents for pressure let-down. Solid wastes as listed in base case above. Catalyst from CO shift. Molten sulfur. ------- III. OVERVIEW OF THE UNITED STATES AMMONIA INDUSTRY A. DESCRIPTION OF INDUSTRY 1. Introduction In 1975, some 67 organizations produced anhydrous ammonia in the United States, and operated a total of 94 ammonia plants. The rated design capacity of the industry was approximately 16.9 million tons per year. Several addi- tional ammonia plants are currently under construction. Ammonia production expanded dramatically during the 1960's, almost tripling from 1960 to 1970. Recent production increases have been far more modest, and there has been no significant growth since 1972. (See Table III-l.) Ammonia is the basic raw material for virtually all nitrogen fertilizers. Furthermore, substantial quantities are also used for the production of non-fertilizer materials, including plastics and resins, synthetic fibers, and explosives. Ammonia is used directly as a fertilizer and as a raw material for other fertilizer products, including urea, ammonium nitrate, ammonium phosphate, and complete mixed fertilizers. Non-fertilizer uses account for about 20% of U.S. ammonia consumption. A use pattern for ammonia is provided in Table III-2. Ammonium nitrate is used as an explosive in surface mining applications. Urea finds significant uses outside of the fertilizer industry, principally as an animal feed and as a component of thermo-setting resins. Natural gas is the basic feedstock for virtually all U.S. ammonia pro- duction, with minor amounts of ammonia being produced from such byproduct streams as chlorine-cell hydrogen and refinery off-gas. In 1973, ammonia manufacture required 591 x 10^ Btu of natural gas. This represented 3% of the total U.S. natural gas supply. Energy requirements for ammonia manufac- ture are provided in Table III-3. In view of the critically short natural gas situation, increasing interest is being shown in the use of coal or petroleum as a basic feedstock. However, it is not expected that plants using such feedstocks will be in operation before the early 1980"s. International trade in nitrogen compounds is significant for the U.S. industry. Because supplies were needed to meet growing domestic require- ments, exports have declines from about 1.8 million tons of ammonia equiva- lent in 1973 to 1.0 million in 1974. Imports have been increasing and now1 are equal to exports. Because of geographical and individual company con-> ' siderations, there are generally both imports and exports of anhydrous 10 ------- TABLE III-l SYNTHETIC AMMONIA - U.S. PRODUCTION HISTORY (000 Short Tons) 1960 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 (Est.) 4,818 8,869 10,605 12,194 12,120 12,769 13,824 14,538 15,193 15,093 15,698 '15,680 Source: U.S. Department of Commerce, Current Industrial Reports TABLE III-2 USES AND SOURCES OF AMMONIA - 1974 OOP Short Tons _X_ Fertilizers for Domestic Use Non-Fertilizer Uses Ammonium Nitrate Explosives Urea - Animal Feeds - Resins and Other Uses Nitric Acid (except for Ammonium Nitrate and Fertilizers) Caprolactam (contained in product only) Acrylonitrile Amines All Other Subtotal Exports (Ammonia and Derivatives) Losses, Inventory Change, & Unaccounted For Total Uses Production - Synthetic - Coke Oven & Other Imports (Ammonia and Derivatives) Total Supply 10,800 550 350 350 450 40 410 260 800 64 3,210 19 6 11 100Z Source: U.S. Department of Commerce, U.S. Department of Agriculture and ADL Estimates. 11 ------- TABLE III-3 1973 ENERGY USE FOR AMMONIA MANUFACTURE Fuel Use Electric Power Use Total Middle Atlantic South Atlantic East North Central West North Central East South Central West South Central Mountain Pacific Alaska Total (1012 BTU) 20.3 36.2 36.0 83.2 62.1 280.2 14.7 42.0 17.7 (106 KWH) 34.4 41.7 41.5 96.7 71.5 327.3 19.7 50.4 20.4 1 ? 1 (10 BTTir 0.4 0.4 0.4 1.0 0.8 3.4 0.2 0.5 0.2 (1012 BTU) 20.7 36.6 36.4 84.2 62.9 283.6 14.9 42.5 17.9 592.4 703.6 7.4 599.8 At 10,500 Btu/kWh. 2 12 Of this amount, all but 1.1 (10 ) Btu was as natural gas. Source: Arthur D. Little, Inc.,"Economic Impact of Shortages on the Fertilizer Industry," Report to the Federal Energy Administration, January 1975. ------- ammonia and its derivatives. Because of the potential limited availability of natural gas for further ammonia plant expansion, the United States may become a major net importer in the not-too-distant future. However, the potential for shifting to coal or petroleum as a feedstock may eliminate the need for such import dependence. 2. Plant Characteristics A modern ammonia plant is typical of most chemical process units with a realistic useable life of 15 to 20 years or longer. Depreciation is usually on the basis of an 11- to 15-year life. There are currently 110 ammonia plants in operation in the United States, with 11 under construction or contracted for. Following significant techno- logical developments in the late 1950's, the size of the typical ammonia plant increased substantially to a minimum of 600 tons per day, with most new ones being in the range of 1,000 to 1,200 tons per day. The larger sizes were dictated by the favorable economics of using centrifugal compressors in place of reciprocating ones. However, plants built prior to these develop- ments, with capacities from 50 to 300 tons per day, are still operating. About 53 plants are over ten years old, and represent 41% of total U.S. capacity. (See Table III-4.) TABLE III-4 AGE OF AMMONIA PLANTS OPERATING AT BEGINNING OF 1976 Total Capacity Number of 000 tons Year of First Operation Plants per year \ Prior to 1960 27 3,521 19 1960 - 1965 26 3,980 22 1966 - 1970 36 9,941 54 1971 - 1975 4 889 5_ 93 18,331 100% 13 ------- Almost all U.S. ammonia capacity is based on natural gas for feedstock, so the location of a plant depends on access to natural gas. However, because of the nation's widespread pipeline distribution system, ammonia plants are widely scattered. There is a great concentration of ammonia plants along the U.S. Gulf Coast, in Texas, Louisiana, and Mississippi with direct access to natural gas, particularly low-cost intrastate gas. In addi- tion to having low-cost natural gas, this location has low-cost transport to the agricultural heartland in the upper Midwest, by barge shipment up the Mississippi, and more recently through the development of an ammonia pipe- line running from the New Orleans area into the eastern and western Mid^ western states. The distribution of ammonia plants by region is provided in Table III-5. TABLE III-5 ANHYDROUS AMMONIA CAPACITY BY REGION IN 1974 Number of Plants Capacity (000 Short Tons Per Year) Middle Atlantic South Atlantic East North Central West North Central East South Central West South Central Mountain Pacific Alaska 6 6 4 15 7 31 6 12 1 859 1,042 1,035 2,417 1,786 8,177 493 1,259 510 5 6 6 14 10 47 3 7 3 Total 88 17,578 100% Multiple plants at the same site counted as one. 14 ------- 3. Integration and Concentration Very few ammonia producers sell ammonia strictly in the merchant market. There is a substantial degree of integration to derivatives, both for ferti- lizer and non-fertilizer purposes. In fact, for many producers, ammonia is produced solely to be used for the manufacture of derivatives or to comple- ment other fertilizer operations. Ammonia is produced by 67 different companies: 12 companies represent 55% of the total capacity. Major companies and their proportion of the total capacity are provided in Figure III-l. « - = 8 I I 8 O » *- — o S o O 8 £ (1) Based on Production Capacity. 12 Companies Represent 54.9% of the Total Capacity. FIGURE III-l. MARKET SHARE OF MAJOR U.S. SYNTHETIC AMMONIA PRODUCERS, 1974 15 ------- B. ECONOMIC OUTLOOK The rate of growth in the consumption of fertilizer nitrogen in the United States has dropped off significantly over that which prevailed for the years prior to 1970. We have summarized prior consumption data in Table III-6 together with our estimates of the U.S. consumption in 1980 and 1985. TABLE III-6 FERTILIZER NITROGEN CONSUMPTION 000 tons NH_ OOP tons N equivalent 1960 2,738 3,339 1965 4,639 5,657 1970 7,459 9,096 1971 8,134 9,920 1972 8,016 9,776 1973 8,339 10,170 1974 9,157 11,167 1975 8,608 10,498 1980 12,300 15,000 1985 (@ 6%/yr) 16,500 20,122 Growth in consumption for the period of 1960 to 1970 averaged 10.5% per year. This has dropped off significantly following 1970. For the four year period from 1970 to 1974, the average annual growth was 5.3%. The decline in the growth rate in nitrogen consumption in recent years may in part be due to a saturation in the market after many years of very rapid growth. More important contributors, however, were worldwide shortages of nitrogen fer- tilizer and very significant price increases. In 1975, consumption declined 6% from the previous year. The recent performance of nitrogen fertilizer consumption casts some doubt on future growth rates. However, there is a fundamental need for increasing quantities, and an average growth rate of 6% 16 ------- per year through 1985 is realistic. Therefore, in Table III-7, we have included our estimates of fertilizer nitrogen consumption in 1980 and 1985, on the basis of a 6% annual growth rate for the next ten years. TABLE III-7 PROJECTED U.S. NITROGEN SUPPLY/DEMAND BALANCE thousand short tons of ammonia 1973/74 1979/80 Uses U.S. fertilizer consumption 11,170 15,000 Non-fertilizer uses 3,230 4,570 Losses, inventory change, etc. 1,230 1,950 Exports 1,510 600 Total 17,140 22,120 Sources Synthetic ammonia production 15,600 20,240 Other production 240 240 Imports 1.300 1,640 Total 17,140 22,120 Projected, based on plants now in place or under construction and a 90% operating rate. Needs, based on other projections in the table. Non-fertilizer uses of ammonia are likewise expected to continue their historic growth rate of about 6% per year, reaching about 4.6 million tons of ammonia equivalent by 1979/80. A projected balance between supply and demand for the United States is provided in Table III-7. In 1973/74, exports exceeded imports by a small margin. The United States has traditionally been a significant exporter, but at the present time imports may be slightly in excess of exports. While domestic production is expected to expand quite significantly with plants already under construction, those plants will not be able to keep pace with consumption through 1980. If no existing plants are closed down, the United States will produce slightly over 20 million tons of ammonia in 1980, but will need more than 22 million tons, even if exports are cut back drastically. If exports are maintained at the present level, the United States will need more than 23 million tons of ammonia equivalent. This implies that the United States will have to expand.either imports or domestic production significantly. i 17 ------- The construction of new ammonia plants is becoming increasingly difficult because of the shortage of natural gas. It is nearly impossible at present to build an ammonia plant based on natural gas in the interstate system. All new ammonia plants under construction are to be based on gas produced within the same state. Even intrastate gas is difficult to obtain, and prices are high. For this reason, producers may begin to consider alternates to natural gas, such as coal and petroleum, as feedstocks for ammonia plants. The economics of ammonia manufacture are sensitive to the cost of both feedstock and capital investment. Both of these factors have escalated very considerably in the last few years. A plant built in 1968 to produce 1,000 tons a day cost just over $25 million. A similar size plant built today, with only some minor improvements, would cost about $63 million. In the 1960's it was commonplace for ammonia plants to obtain natural gas for about $0.20 per 106 Btu: today it is difficult to find gas for less than $1.00 per 10*> Btu. The difference in the cost of manufacture, including an allowance to provide a return on investment, is provided in Table III-8. Many plants built in the 1960's still enjoy low-cost natural gas under long-term contracts and still have the economics shown, which indicate that ammonia could be sold profitably at less than $45 per short ton. However, if new investment is to be attracted, based on the higher feedstock prices, ammonia prices must be such as to allow for profitable operations, and this price for ammonia must be about $100 per ton. Thus, today there is a significant variation in the profitability of ammonia plants in the United States depending both on when they were built and the current price for natural gas. 18 ------- Year Built Capacity - Tons/Stream Day Annual Production - Tons Fixed Capital Investment TABLE III-8 CHANGE IN THE ECONOMICS OF AMMONIA MANUFACTURE Plant Built in mid-60Ts 1968 1,000 340,000 $25.6 Million Similar Plant Built in 1975 1975 1,000 340,000 $63.4.Million Natural Gas Cost - $/10 Btu (HHV) Costs Natural Gas 35.8«10 Btu/Ton 33-106 Btu/Ton Power & Miscellaneous Supplies Labor, Maintenance, & Overheads Subtotal Investment-Related Costs Depreciation 11 years Local Taxes & Insurance 1.5% Return on Investment (pretax) 20% Subtotal 0.20 $/Short Ton % 7.16 17% 1.00 $/Short Ton 5.17 7.16 19.49 6.84 1.13 15.06 23.03 12 17 46 16 3 35 54 33.00 5.17 7.12 45.29 16.95 2.80 37.29 57.04 32% 5 7 44 17 3 36 56 TOTAL 42.52 100% 102.33 100% ------- IV. COMPARISON OF CURRENT AND ALTERNATIVE PROCESSES If the natural gas.shortage persists, the ammonia industry could be expected to implement the use of alternate feedstocks, such as coal and heavy fuel oil, in 50-100% of new plant construction from 1985 forward, and one or two new plants may be built prior to that time. During this period, 5,000 tons per day of new ammonia capacity will be needed each year. Given this needed rate of new construction, we estimate that 2,500 to 5,000 tons per day of new capacity based on coal or heavy oil feedstocks will be built each year. This corresponds to two to five new plants per year of 1,000 to 1,500 tons per day capacity. New plants as described here, are to provide new capacity rather than to replace existing plants based on natural gas. To accomplish this for the coal alternative, incremental capital costs of $111 per annual ton of ammonia (a 60% increase) and incremental production costs of $17 per ton of ammonia are anticipated, including $8.65 per ton of ammonia for pollution abatement to satisfy the environmental regulations expected for this alternative process for producing ammonia. In addition, the needed control technology will mean an expenditure of energy equivalent to 165 x 10^ Btu per ton of ammonia. •> To accomplish this for the heavy oil alternative, capital costs of $21 per annual ton of ammonia (a 24% increase) and incremental production costs of $45 per ton of ammonia are anticipated, including $3.46 per ton of ammonia for pollution abatement to satisfy the environmental regulations expected for this alternative process for producing ammonia. In addition, the needed control technology will mean an expenditure of energy equivalent to 125 x 103 Btu per ton of ammonia. Nevertheless, these process alternatives appear promising; however, they will require additional research to establish the pollutional character and appropriate control technology to verify the results of this assessment. A. REASONS FOR CHOOSING OPTIONS FOR IN-DEPTH ANALYSIS The review of the implications of producing ammonia from coal or oil is necessitated by the real possibility that the processes may be implemented in the United States before 1985, and possibly as early as 1980. The use of coal or oil will be caused by a reduced supply of natural gas, high prices for natural gas, or both. The United States is faced with a continuing need for increasing its capacity to produce ammonia and is also faced with a rapid decline in the availability of natural gas - the raw material that has been used almost exclusively for the past 30 years. The present and projected scarcity of natural gas has been well documented. The ammonia industry cannot count on 20 ------- gas as a basis for substantial future growth in this country. Those plants now using gas are faced with stretching their supply by converting heating applications to other fuels and by ensuring they receive proper recognition in the setting of priorities and allocations of available gas supplies. In addition to the problems concerning the availability of new gas, prices have risen significantly. Until recently, ammonia plants purchased gas at as low as $0.15 per MCF, and few paid more than $0.50. Because a natural-gas- based ammonia plant costs less and is less expensive to operate than either coal- or oil-based plants, ammonia plants have not been designed for operation on coal or oil in areas where natural gas is available. Today, the price of natural gas is much higher, particularly to new customers who are not protected by old contracts. And it is nearly impossible for a new plant to obtain sup- plies of natural gas from the interstate pipeline system. Thus, new plants must be built using gas produced "in state" which is not subject to federal regulation. Such gas is available - although not readily - and prices range from $0.50 to $2.00 per MCF. Furthermore, contracts written today usually have escalation clauses allowing future price increases. An ammonia producer wishing to expand is faced with the options: • Try to find a supply of intrastate natural gas, pay a high price, and assume the risk of further escalation; • Plan to import ammonia, either by contracting for it or investing in an ammonia plant in a foreign country that has lower-cost gas; or • Put up an ammonia plant based on.coal or petroleum. These are not easy choices. The federal regulations concerning natural gas may change, thus significantly affecting the price and availability of natural gas in this country. • And some new capacity could be based on isolated pockets of natural gas, mine drainage gas, or byproduct gases. However, these rep- resent opportunistic situations rather than a basis for industry expansion. Foreign investment, when it is made, must be made in countries with sur- plus gas. By and large, such countries are poor risks for investors, for they generally try to exact a high price for the gas, even though they have little alternative use for it. There would also be high capital and operating costs because of insufficient infrastructure. i On the other hand, before investing in a .plant based on oil or coal, one must be confident that raw materials prices are and will continue to be suffi- ciently lower than those for natural gas to justify the greater investment. The technology for the partial oxidation of fuel oil is much better established than that for using coal, and also the handling of oil is easier than handling of coal and disposing of ash. However, the supply and price of coal is more secure than for petroleum. On balance, it appears that in the long run, coal will be the preferred raw material while petroleum remains a possibility. Easing of supplies of natural gas would mitigate against either route. 21 ------- B. COMPARISON OF CURRENT AND ALTERNATIVE PROCESSES 1. Methodology a. Overview The base case technology that we use for comparison within this study is production of ammonia based on steam reforming using natural gas as the feed- stock. The alternatives as defined in this study are ammonia production based on coal and on heavy fuel oil. In each of the alternatives the feedstock is gasified to produce a synthesis gas (syngas) which is then used to produce ammonia. Because the changes discussed here are all prior to the actual synthesis loop and are related to production of the synthesis gas, we have segmented the discussion of the alternatives as follows: • Receiving and Storage of Feedstock; • Gasification (if needed) to produce raw syngas; • Syngas purification; and • Ammonia synthesis loop. As a guide for interpreting the energy and pollution effects of chang- ing feedstocks on the economics of manufacturing ammonia, we-have estimated typical investments and operating costs of new plants using natural gas, coal, and heavy fuel oil feedstocks, based on conditions prevailing during March 1975. As the basis for our estimates, we selected the high-pressure reforming centrifugal-compressor type of ammonia plant which has dominated new construction for the past several years (and is expected to continue to do so) and 1,000 tons per stream day for the rated capacity. Including 90 days of ammonia storage (90,000 tons) we estimated that a natural gas plant would cost $63.4 million, an oil oxidation plant $70.6 million, and a high-pressure coal oxidation plant $101.1 million. Using high-sulfur Illinois coal (10,800 Btu/lb as mined) charged at $0.71 per thousand Btu, gas at $0.85 per thousand Btu, and oil at $1.90 per thousand Btu, the manufacturing costs are substantially lower for the natural- gas-based plant than for the others because of the sizeable differences in feedstock cost and fixed investment. To allow for a modest return on fixed capital, an amount equivalent to 20% of the investment was added to the manufacturing cost as shown. It appears that the coal- and oil-based plants are not very competitive under our estimate conditions; assuming, of course, that natural gas is available at 1975 prices. Within Chapter V we discuss the impact of fuel availability and prices on the cost of producing ammonia and show that - at price ranges different from those prevalent in March 1975 - coal and oil will look attractive as feedstocks. 22 ------- b. Cost Factors Relevant to Comparing Alternative Processes to the Base Line The costs of raw materials and byproducts are based on costs prevailing in the first half of 1975. Energy costs for coal, oil, and natural gas have been based on the exist- ing prices paid in March 1975 by electric utilities. These figures are shown in Table IV-I for the regions considered in our comparisons. We have found that such prices are consistent with prices reported by SIC sector in the 1972 Census. We have escalated such figures by fuel cost indices to 1975. Where- ever we have diverged from the March 1975 cost paid by electric utilities we have so indicated. Similarly, energy credits are taken on a consistent basis. It should be recognized that most of the gas.and electric utility industry is regulated and, therefore, the price prevalent in the first half of 1975 would not be indicative of what a new plant built on a greenfield site would have to pay. (Estimates indicate that the cost of natural gas for such new facilities might well be equal to that of the price of oil.) Also the price of electric power, to reflect higher fuel costs, might be two or three times higher than electric power costs in early 1975. The cost of water used purely for cooling purposes was based on $0.03 per thousand gallons. The cost of process water is based on $0.20 per thousand gallons. We attempted to use the cost of labor wages published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics for March 1975 by industry sector. However, in the ammonia sector, such average labor costs are not generally representative, as shown in Table IV-2. Therefore, we used a higher cost of $6.00 per hour, which better reflects the labor rate. This discrepancy between Bureau of Labor Statistics figures and what we feel to be the current labor rate occurs because of the SIC code grouping used. Agricultural chemicals production, which includes ammonia, involves many industry sections that use relatively low-cost labor. However, ammonia production is a more highly specialized operation. The costs of maintenance, labor, and materials have been taken as 3% of the initial investment costs for plants based on natural gas, and 3.5 and 4.0%, respectively, for oil- and coal-based plants. This reflects a slightly higher maintenance requirement for such plants. Labor overhead has been taken at 35% of the labor wages. This would account for fringe benefits, such as vacations, holidays, and sick pay, as well as overtime pay. Miscellaneous variable costs and credits include such items as chemicals, catalysts, supplies, and such services as analytical services. Under the category of fixed costs 'we have shown plant overhead at 70% of labor and supervision, which would include items not allocated to the produc- tion sector. Local taxes and insurance are taken as 1.5% of the initial capital investment. To distribute the cost of the capital assets (less salvage value if any) over the estimated life of the facility, annual depreciation is calculated on a straight-line basis over 11 years for the ammonia industry. In addition to being used often in feasibility studies, such a depreciation method and period are consistent with IRS guidelines. 23 ------- TABLE IV-1 BENCHMARK ENERGY COSTS FOR COAL, OIL, GAS AND ELECTRIC POWER IN MARCH 1975 17 1 • 1 , Fuel prices ($/106 Btu) Coal Oil Gas Illinois 0.71 - 0.85 Middle West - 2.00 Gulf Coast - - 0.70 (Texas) $/kWh2 Power 0.019 0.014 Average fuel prices paid by steam-electric plants. 2 1974 power costs updated to 1975 using factor of 1.17. Source: Chemical Week, October 22, 1975. TABLE IV-2 BENCHMARK EMPLOYEE EARNINGS MARCH 1975 Hourly Industry SIC Code Earnings* Ammonia 287-Agricultural chemicals $4.43 Fertilizers 287-Agricultural chemicals 4.43 Petroleum Refining 291-Petroleum refining 6.75 * Gross earnings of production or non-supervisory workers. Source: Employment and Earnings, Vol. 21, No. 11, May 1975, Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Department of Labor. We have shown an annual allowance for "return on investment" (pre-tax) amounting to 20% of initial capital investment. The allowance is allocated to a ton of product, assuming that the facility operates at 100% capacity. 24 ------- 2. Ammonia Production Based on Natural Gas Ammonia is used as a source of nitrogen for the production of most fertilizers and is made by the reaction of atmospheric nitrogen with hydro- gen. All processes manufacturing ammonia utilize atmospheric air as the source of nitrogen. Hydrogen can be produced from almost any hydrocarbon or carbonaceous material. Careful consideration is given to the choice of raw material, because operating costs for ammonia production are greatly influenced by the cost of producing hydrogen, which in turn is very dependent on raw material cost. Possible sources of hydrogen are natural gas, LPG, naphtha, heavy fuel oil, coal and lignite, electrolytic hydrogen, and by- product hydrogen. As the base case, we selected the high-pressure reforming centrifugal-compressor type of ammonia plant which has dominated new construc- tion for the past several years. a. Process Description There are four major operations in manufacturing ammonia: gas prepara- tion, carbon monoxide conversion, gas purification, and ammonia synthesis. (1) Gas Preparation Several variations of ammonia synthesis gas processes are available: steam reforming, partial oxidation, the autothermal process, and gasification of coal. The only process of importance in the United States is steam reform- ing using natural gas as the feedstock, as shown in Figure IV-1. The primary steam reforming of natural gas is carried out in externally heated tubes containing a reforming catalyst. The feed consists of steam and desulfurized natural gas. A controlled amount of air is added to the primary reformer effluent as it enters the secondary reformer. The secondary reforming is accomplished in a packed catalyst bed in which the heat required for reform- ing is provided by the partial combustion of the primary reformer effluent. Steam is produced from the flue gas out of the primary reformer and from the process gas leaving the secondary reformer by heat recovery. Plants that have a package boiler typically use it only during startup operations unless steam is needed for the manufacture of derivatives. In the ammonia plant, the steam balance is' such that little or no external steam generation is needed during capacity or near-capacity operation. (2) Carbon Monoxide Conversion The gas leaving the gas preparation unit is cooled and passed through a converter containing a Mo-Co sulfided catalyst. The carbon monoxide reacts with steam to produce carbon dioxide and hydrogen by the water-gas shift reaction: CO + H0 -> C0 + H 25 ------- Nalural-Cai Fetd Niphthi Fnd Liquid Ammonia to Proceu or Storage' Figure IV-1. Flow Diagram for Synthesizing Ammonia By Steam-Reforming Process All new processes employ monoethanolamine, hot potassium carbonate, Sulphinpl®, or Fluor® solvent to remove the carbon dioxide from the gas stream. (3) Final Gas Purification The small amounts of carbon oxides remaining in the synthesis gas must be removed. The three processes that are available are methanation, ammoniacal copper chloride solution absorption, and liquid nitrogen wash. (4) Ammonia Synthesis Ammonia is synthesized by the reaction between hydrogen and nitrogen at elevated temperatures and pressures in the presence of a catalyst. b. Production Cost Table IV-3 shows typical costs of a large plant (now typical of the U.S. industry). Based on a plant with a capacity of 1000 tons per stream day (which would produce 340,000 tons per year), a Gulf Coast location and March 1975 energy and fuel costs, the estimated cost of producing ammonia would be $127.56 per ton. Of this total cost, $29.38, or 23% represents the cost of the energy inputs. About 14% of the cost is attributable to the feedstock itself, in,this case natural gas. 26 ------- TABLE IV-3 Product: Ammonla ESTIMATED PRODUCTION COST OF AMMONIA FROM NATURAL GAS (BASE CASE) Process; Steam-methane reforming Location! Gulf Coast .Design loop tons/stream day _. . , -,,, lnl. nnn Capacity • Fixed Investment :$63.400.OOP Annual Productioni 340,000 tons Stream Days/Yr ; 340 VARIABLE COSTS Natural Gas Feedstock Natural Gas Fuel Electric Power Energy Subtotal Catalysts & Chemicals Cooling Water Total SEMI-VARIABLE COSTS Direct Operating Labor (Wages) Direct Supervisory Wages Maintenance Labor, Materials & Supplies Labor Overhead Total FIXED COSTS Plant Overhead Local Taxes & Insurance Depreciation Total TOTAL PRODUCTION COSTS Return on Investment (Pretax) TOTAL Units Used in Costing or Annual Cost Basis 106 Btu 106 Btu kHh 1000 gal 24 men 4 foremen 1 superintendent 3% of investment/ yr 35% of labor & supervision 70% of labor & supervision 1.5X of ,' investment/yr 11 yr; straight line 20% of investment/ $/Unit 0.85 0.85 0.014 0.03 $12,000/yr $18,000/yr 825,000/yr Units Consumed per Ton of Product 20.4 12.6 95 108 S/Ton of Product 17.34 10.71 1.33 29.38 0.60 3.24 33.22 0.85 0.21 0.07 5.59 0.40 7.12 0.80 2.80 16.95 20.55 60.89 37.29 98.18 27 ------- c. Energy Usage Table IV-4 provides a summary of fuel use, by type, for ammonia produc- tion. These numbers are based on typical U.S. processes. They do not provide averages for the total industry; rather, they provide the fuel consumption for the most typical process for producing the fertilizer in the United States. To determine regional use, we estimated production in each of the regions, based on the capacities of production facilities in those regions. Table' IV-6 provides a summary of energy use by region and by energy form. To put the ammonia industry in perspective, the United States consumed approximately 22,600 x 10^2 stu of natural gas for all purposes in 1973. The manufacture of ammonia for fertilizers required 490 x 10^ Btu, or about 2.2% of total U.S. natural gas use. Regional fuel use is in accord with the regional production of the large fuel users. Thus, the West South Central region, which has a very large ammonia capacity, represents some 47% of the fuel used by the ammonia industry. Ammonia plants also are major users of electric power. The most significant electrical energy-using region is the West South Central. d. Effluent Controls Required for the Base-Case Use of Natural Gas The manufacture of ammonia from natural gas has associated with it very few environmental problems. Schematic representation of the flowsheet, show- ing the potential air, water and solid waste emissions, is given in Figure IV-2. The nature of these emissions is summarized in Table IV-7, and a detailed discussion of each is given in the following sections, including consideration of emission sources and rates, available control technology, and the cost of control. The example calculations given in this section are based on a 1000- ton-per-stream-day ammonia plant using a natural gas feedstock that has negligible sulfur content. The EPA established effluent limitations for the Fertilizer Industry, 40 CFR 418, 8 April 1974. The ammonia industry portion (subpart B) of the guidelines was based on information provided in the Development Document.* Although typical ranges of concentrations are given for cooling towers and boiler blowdown wastewater streams, as well as for process condensate streams, the Development Document for the fertilizer industry presented less quantitative data on wastewater characteristics than is found in the Development Documents for other industries. Consequently, it has been necessary to rely on broad estimates of capital and operating costs for much of the pollution control costs. *' Development Document for Effluent Limitations Guidelines and New Source Performance Standards for the Basic Fertilizer Chemicals Segment of the Fertilizer Manufacturing Point Source Category," U.S. Environmental Protec- tion Agency, March 1974, EPA~440/l-74-011-a." 28 ------- TABLE IV-4 ENERGY USE IN AMMONIA PRODUCTION Energy Factors (units per ton) Natural Gas Total Electric or Fuel Oil Steam 10^ Btu Product or Operation (kWh) (106Btu) (103 lb) Equivalents 2 Ammonia 45.5 36.5 - 37.0 Table IV-5 describes where the natural gas is used within the process. 2 Approximately 3.5 million Btu are available from recycle of ammonia synthesis loop purge gas. Source: Arthur D. Little, Inc., "Economic Impact of Shortages on the Fertilizer Industry," Report to the Federal Energy Administration, January 1975. TABLE IV-5 NATURAL GAS CONSUMPTION IN AMMONIA PRODUCTION* (106 Btu/ton product) Feedstock Reformer Fuel 20.4 12.6** *Using centrifugal compressors **Total consumption is 16.1 million Btu. However, 3.5 million Btu per ton are available from tail gas from the synthesis loop. Source: Arthur D. Little, Inc. estimates. 29 ------- TABLE IV-6 1973 REGIONAL FUEL AND POWER USE: AMMONIA Capacity New England Middle Atlantic South Atlantic E.N. Central W.N. Central E.S. Central W.S. Central Mountain Pacific Alaska TOTAL Total 859 1,042 1,035 2,417 1,786 8,177 493 1,259 510 17,578 (OOP tpy) Based on Natural Gas 585 1,042 1,035 2,394 1,786 8,062 423 1,208 510 17,045 Production Based on Natural Gas (000 TPY) 515 917 911 2,106 1,571 7,093 372 1,063 449 14,997 Natural Gas Used Feedstock @ 23.9 x 106 Btu (1012 Btu) 12.3 21.9 21.8 50.3 37.6 169.5 8.9 25.4 10.7 Reformers & Boilers @ 15.6 x 106 Btu (101Z Btu) 8.0 14.3 14.2 32.9 23.2 110.7 5-8 16.6 7.0 Fuel Oil Used 1.3 358.4 232.7 1.3 Electric Power 45.5 kWh1 106 kWh 34.4 41.7 41.5 96.7 71.5 327.3 19.7 50.4 20.4 703.6 Taken on total production—not just natural gas plants. Source: Arthur D. Little, Inc., "Economic Impact of Shortages on the Fertilizer Industry,1' Report to the Federal Energy Administration, January 1975. Gas Preparation Carbon Monoxide Shift Conversion Final Purification Ammonia Synthesis Loop Storage and Loading Figure IV-2. Ammonia Production Based on Natural Gas Feedstock 30 ------- TABLE IV-7 EMISSIONS FROM AMMONIA PLANTS BASED ON NATURAL GAS WATER EFFLUENTS* Raw water treatment plant Cooling tower blowdown Boiler blowdown Compressor blowdown Process condensate Notes jf luent AIR EMISSIONS* '!> Synthesis loop purge Product loading emission burned as supple- mental fuel in reformer SOLID WASTES* \T\ Shift converter catalyst r i 2| Ammonia converter catalyst recovered *Keyed to Figure IV-2. 31 ------- (3) Energy Aspects The best practicable control technologies required to achieve waste- water effluent limitations by 1977 for ammonia production have a high energy component. However, in relation to the total energy requirements for the production of ammonia, the energy requirements for water pollution control are estimated to result in an increase of only b.9%. These estimates are based on the assumption that the best practicable technology is steam strip- ping for ammonia. Process steam generated above process requirements can be used for the treatment technology} and thus, it would not increase requirements for scarce fuels such as natural gas in typical plants. There- fore, these environmental requirements should not significantly affect the production of ammonia. However, alternative fuels (i.e., fuel oil) may be utilized to produce the steam required in the effluent control technology in some plants if natural gas is very scarce, thus posing some additional, but minor, problems of control. A summary of the energy aspects are pre- sented in Table IV-8. (4) Cost Aspects Current pollution control regulations will have only moderate impact on investment requirements and operating costs in the ammonia industry, as shown in Table IV-9. The energy component of water pollution control costs for the control of nitrogen effluent from ammonia plants is 73% of the total, as shown in Table IV-10. However, these figures are deceiving in that it would be more logical to compare the increased energy requirements to the total energy requirements for the production of ammonia. On such a basis, nitrogen effluent controls would have only a slight impact on the energy requirements for the production of ammonia. TABLE IV-8 ESTIMATED ENERGY IMPACT FOR AMMONIA PRODUCTION OF CURRENT POLLUTION CONTROL REGULATIONS Energy Requirements! Power (kwh) Fuel (1Q6 Btu) Total1 (106 Btu) 2 Production Cper ton of product) 45.5 36.5 40 Pollution control (per ton of product) 7 0.3 0.37 Percent Increase ".7 0.9 1. Assumes 10,500 Btu/KWH 2. Approximately 3.5 million Btu are available from recycle of ammonia synthesis loop purge gas. Source: "Development Document for Effluent Limitations Guidelines and New Source Performance Standards for the Basic Fertilizer Chemicals", March 1974. 32 ------- TABLE IV-9 WATER EFFLUENT TREATMENT COSTS — AMMONIA PLANTS 4 5 152,900 134,300 30,600 26,900 13,900 12,200 2,300 2,000 33,900 1,750 17,200 7,350 $ 97,900 $ 50,200 0.77 0.33 27.4 17.3 435 275 5 - 10 Treatment Alternative* 1 Investment $302,900 Return on Investment (pretax)** 60,600 Depreciation 27,550 Taxes and Insurance 4,550 Operating & Maintenance Costs (excluding energy and power) 12,100 Energy and Power Costa*** 273,600 Total Annual Costs $378,400 Energy (106 'kWh/yr) 12.3 Raw Waste Load (liters/sec) 17.6 (gpm) 280 Resulting Effluent Level (mg/ liter) 25 NH3-N (lb/1000 lb)-84 NH3-N 1. Ammonia/ condensate stripping 2. Integrated ammonia/condensate stripping 3. Oil/grease removal system 2 156,650 31,350 14,250 2,350 6,300 168,700 $222,950 7.5 17.6 280 25 NH3-N 84 NH3-N 3 28,400 5,700 2,600 450 1,150 7,850 $17,750 0.35 6.3 100 < 25 oil < 30 oil 4. Biological treatment nitrification-denitrification 5. Ammonia/condensate air stripping * Treatment Alternatives ** 20 Percent of Investment/Year *** Energy price basis not given by the source. This number was updat 5 NH-N 33 Size Basis: 90 kkg/day (1000 ton/day) ammonia plant All cost figures are March 1975. Source: "Development Document for Effluent Limitations Guidelines and New Source Performance Standards for the Basic Fertilizer Chemicals," EPA, March 1974. ------- TABLE IV-10 WATER POLLUTION CONTROL COSTS1 ($) AMMONIA/CONDENSATE2 STEAM STRIPPING' Plant Size 1000 T/D Investment $302,900 Return on Investment (pretax) 20% $ 60,600 Depreciation (11 years, straightllne) $ 27,500 Operating and Maintenance Cost $ 12,100 Energy and Power Costs $273,600 Total Annual Costs $373,800 % of Total Costs for Energy and Power 73% 1. Based on 1971 costs updated by ADL to March 1975. 2. . Best practicable technology required July 1, 1977 (water effluent). 3. Energy price basis not given by the source. This number was updated from 1971 using a factor of 1.4. Source: "Development Document for Effluent Limitations Guidelines and New Source Performance Standards for the Basic Fertilizer Chemicals", EPA, March 1974. (5) Impact of Current Air Related Environmental Problems The sources, control technology and cost of control of air pollution emissions are described in this section. In compiling the information that is presented, we have relied on information in our own files, industry experts and government information.* (6) Emissions Sources We have considered the base case plant as divided into three areas: Raw Material Receiving and Storage; Synthesis Gas Production; and Ammonia Production, Storage, and Loading. *Air Pollutant Emission Factors, EPA Report No, APTD 0923 (Contract No. EPA 22-69-119) prepared by TRW, Inc., April 1970. 34 ------- • Raw Materials Receiving and Storage - For a plant manufacturing ammonia from natural gas, receiving and storage is very simple. The gas is usually delivered to the plant via a pipeline and is either used directly or a portion is stored in a pressurized storage tank. There are no air pollutants associated with this operation. • Synthesis Gas Production - The production of ammonia synthesis gas from a natural gas feedstock is usually accomplished by steam- methane reforming using a nickel catalyst. Since the catalyst is sensitive to sulfur, the feedstock sulfur content is usually kept less than 2 parts per million. Therefore, no significant sulfur emissions are expected in the base case. No particulates are pro- duced in this process. Since the natural gas is often pressurized prior to reforming, the system will be a pressurized one and pro- cess leaks are expected to be nil. • Ammonia Production. Storage and Loading - Most of the potential air pollution emissions associated with ammonia are emitted from the synthesis loop and from product storage and loading. These two sources are briefly described below. There is little differ- ence between this portion of the base case plant and the ammonia production and storage associated with the new technologies dis- cussed in later sections of this report. • Synthesis Loop Purge - There is a tendency for inert material, such as methane and argon, to concentrate within the synthesis loop. Therefore, there is a purge stream off the ammonia converts exit stream to remove inerts from the ammonia synthesis loop. In early plants, the purge was often vented to the atmosphere and was occasionally scrubbed with water to remove the ammonia, gen- erating a wastewater stream containing ammonia which had to be treated. Currently, the loss of hydrogen from the synthesis loop is not total, because the purge gas can be burned in the reformer furnace. Cryogenic purification of the synthesis gas lowers the inerts in the loop and reduces the purge requirements. In some plants, cryogenic techniques are used to separate methane, argon, and residual ammonia from the purge gas into separate components, each of which can be handled separately without environmental problems. The above processing methods are. applicable to both the base case technology and to new technology, so there will not be a net impact changing from one technology to another. • Product Storage and Loading - Leaks are associated with the han- dling of ammonia product, with major leaks occurring during trans- fer of product into trucks or railroad cars. Because the ammonia leaks occur at specific locations within the plant, they can be readily collected and removed by wet scrubbers; however, their collection is usually for occupational safety reasons since the preferred method for removing ammonia from waste streams is via stripping into the air. The control of ammonia leaks from fugi- tive leaks requires good maintenance, and such leaks rarely occur in quantities great enough to either pose environmental problems or warrant control. ------- (7) Treatment and Cost of Control To compare base case technology with new technology, we considered the differences in the environmental control costs to be in the processing areas of Receiving and Storage and Synthesis Gas Production. For the base case technology, the environmental control costs associated with these two proc- essing areas are negligible. There will be a small cost associated with environmental control of the ammonia storage and loading area. An example of the costs that can be expected in controlling storage and loading emis- sions is shown in Table IV-11. The control of the ammonia emissions is based on a packed column scrubber having a gas flow rate of approximately 2,000 scfm. The scrubber water is treated with the other process wastewaters. The capital cost for the system is approximately $23,500 and the operating costs are approximately $0.03 per ton of ammonia. These costs are consid- ered to be negligible compared to the anticipated environmental control costs associated with the control of sulfur for the new technologies using coal and oil feedstocks. Therefore, they have not been factored into our analysis. The solid wastes from the process are process catalysts, the sludge from process and wastewater treatment. The catalysts are recovered, with the exception of the iron oxide from the ammonia converter (which is gen- erally landfilled). TABLE IV-11 EXAMPLE COST OF AMMONIA SCRUBBING* Basis: 2000 scfm Capital Investment $23,500 Operating Cost, $/¥ear Indirect Costs Depreciation2 2,100 Taxes and Insurance 500 Return on Investment 4,700 Direct Costs Electric Power 500 Operating Labor Maintenance Labor and Materials 1,200 Total Annual Cost, $/Year 9,000 Unit Cost, $/ton of ammonia ? 0.03 1March 1975 basis 11 years, straight line 2Z of investment/year 4 201 of investment/year Negligible 5* of investment/year 36 ------- 3. Ammonia Production Based on Coal Gasification a. Process Description Given the shortage of natural gas, and the need for the United States to reduce its dependence on foreign petroleum, serious consideration should be given to basing future ammonia plants on coal. A small number of ammonia plants based on coal have been built over the years (Table IV-12), but some of them have since been closed. Never- theless, recent increases in the price of gaseous and liquid hydrocarbons throughout the world have revived interest in using coal. Prior to World War II, nearly all synthetic ammonia production was based on the use of coal to produce synthesis gas (a mixture of carbon monoxide and hydrogen) using oxygen (or air) and steam. The coal reaction with the steam is: C + H_0 »- CO + H £* L* Heat must be supplied to support the reaction, in addition to that needed to attain reaction temperature. The heat is supplied by the combus- tion or partial combustion of coal; the oxygen used burns some of the coal to reach the higher temperatures needed for optimum reaction rates. There are three categories of gasification: • Fluidized-bed - Coal is fluidized by oxygen and steam. (The Winkler gasifier is an example.) a Fixed- (or slowly moving) bed - Coal is supported on a grate. (The Lurgi gasifier is an example.) « Entrained (or suspended) bed - Coal is suspended in the oxidant gas stream. (The Koppers-Totzek and Texaco gasifiers are examples.) Using coal as a feedstock from which to obtain a synthesis gas for ammonia production, the objective is to free the hydrogen that is present in the fuel and to react the carbon in the fuel with water vapor to release more hydrogen. The second reaction may proceed directly or after forming an intermediate such as carbon monoxide. The optimum process would do the reaction simplyj_with^ a_minimum number of reaction steps and without producing byproducts that have inherent dis- posal problems. It should also be able to handle a relatively wide range of coal feedstocks, because-even within a given mine-fuel properties vary from sample to sample. 37 ------- TABLE IV-12 AMMONIA PLANTS BASED ON GASIFICATION OF COAL Country CSSR Finland .France Germany Greece Spain Yugoslavia Turkey Zambia Paxistan India Thailand Korea (South) Japan Location Most (Brux) Oulu Mazingarbe Leuna Wesseling Ptolemais Puentes de Garcia Rodriguez Puertollano Monzon Goradze Klitahya Kafue near Lusaka Oaud Khel Neiveli Mae Moh Naju Onahama Onahama Akita Nagoya Kurosaki Toyama Gasification Process Winkler Koppers-Totzek Koppers-Totzek Winkler Pintsch-Hildebrand Winkler Rummel Koppers-Totzek Koppers-Totzek Winkler * Wellmann Winkler Winkler Koppers-Totzek Koppers-Totzek Lurgi pressure process Winkler Koppers-Totzek Lurgi -pressure process Koppers-Totzek VIAG VIAG Winkler Winkler Winkler Winkler Fuel Lignite Bituminous coal fuel oil Bituminous coal Lignite Low-temperature coke from lignite Briquettes made of lignite Lignite Lignite Lignite Lignite Bituminous coal Anthracite Lignite Lignite Lignite Bituminous coal Bituminouseoal Lignite Lignite Anthracite Bituminous coal Bituminous coal Bituminous coal .Low temperature coke •Bituminous coal Bituminous coal Bituminous coal Remarks Initially built for hydrogena- tion of lignite In addition to revolving grate and slag/tap gas producers using metallurgical coke Initially built for hydrogena- tion of lignite Molten slag Revolving grate plus oxygen . Revolving grate, no oxygen Revolving grate, no oxygen Source: Ammonia, Part I, Edited by A.V. Slack and G. Russel James, 1973, Marcell Pekker, Inc., N.Y. 38 ------- In general, equilibrium favors methane formation at low reaction tem- perature and high pressure. However, methane cannot be utilized in ammonia production. Hydrogen and carbon monoxide formation is favored at high temperatures. Winkler, Koppers-Totzek, and Lurgi gasifiers have all been demonstrated in commercial operation and could be deemed proven and reliable. There is a fourth gasifier not yet in full-scale commercial operation which we believe may be very advantageous for ammonia manufacture. A high-pressure partial- oxidation system (such as that developed by Texaco) can produce synthesis gas, without byproducts, at pressures up to"1000 psi. Such a pro^ooo can use almost any coal, coking or non-coking, high or low sulfur, and can be integrated Into an energy-efficient ammonia process. One such sequence would involve the following steps, which are outlined in Figure IV-3 through IV-8 later in this report: • Coal receiving and handling, • Coal grinding, • High pressure gasification with oxygen, • Ash removal and handling, • CO conversion using a sulfided catalyst, • Heat recovery, • Acid gas (H_S and CO-) removal, • Low temperature purification, • Compression, and • Synthesis and recovery. Apart from the high pressure gasification step, this integration employs processes that have all been commercially used under the conditions involved and it affords excellent energy efficiency requiring only a modest amount of auxiliary steam for compressors in both air plant and synthesis. A description of the inlet and outlet streams from the gasifier is presented in Table IV-13, An air separation plant provides oxygen for gasification and high-purity nitrogen for the low-temperature purification section. To remove carbon dioxide and hydrogen sulfide, the Rectisol process may be used, because it provides a separation of the two gases into a pure carbon dioxide suitable for urea production and a hydrogen sulfide-rich stream for conversion to sulfur in a Claus process plant. 39 ------- TABLE IV-13 GASIFICATION SYSTEM Basia: Illinois Ho. 6 Coal 1.000 'con/stream day Gasification System Feed Coal (ton/operating day) Oxygen (ton/operating day) Water (gal/hr) Gasification System Product Product gas (Hydrogen plus Carbon Monoxide) (10* SCF/operating day)1 72.700 Slag2 (ton/day) 181 Ptllltlea Required per MM SCF CO + H2 Electrical Energy (kWh) 600 Stea» (pounds 9 250 pal) 6.000 Cooling water (gal) 125,000 SCF - Standard cubic fe«t neaaured at 60*F and 14.696 psla. Carbon content. 2Z of by wt. (1) Coal Preparation and Gasification Ground coal is mixed with a. water slurry of recycled soot from the soot thickener. The resulting slurry is pumped to the gasifier, where partial combustion with oxygen takes place under pressure. The synthesis gas (syngas) so produced along with accompanying slag and particulate matter (soot) is quenched by direct contact with water. The slag is removed from the bottom of the gasifier vessel by lock-hopper. The 'quenched syngas is further scrubbed with hot water to remove the soot, which consists of uncon- verted carbon and fly-ash. The steam content of the scrubbed gas is suffi- cient for shift conversion without further steam addition. Condensate return provides the make-up water for the system. It is fed first to the scrubber where it picks up the soot, and then is stripped of dissolved gases, which are principally hydrogen sulfide and carbon dioxide. The acid gases are sent to a Glaus sulfur recovery unit. The stripping medium is byproduct nitrogen from the air separation plant. The stripped soot/water stream goes to a thickener where the soot slurry is concentrated by settling. The clarified overflow water from the thickener. is recycled to the gas scrubber. The thickened soot slurry is recycled to1 the slurry preparation section. 40 ------- (2) CO Shift Conversion The product gas from the coal gaslfiers, after water scrubbing for removal of ash and soot, contains an appreciable concentration of carbon monoxide. For ammonia synthesis, it is necessary to react the carbon mon- oxide with hydrogen by use of the CO shift-conversion step, as indicated in the equation CO + H20 J C02 + H2 This reaction is exothermic and the t^ilibrium is favored by low temperatures. However, an active catalyst is necessary to get appreciable rates of reaction at low temperatures. About ten years ago, an iron oxide catalyst was the conventional shift-conversion catfiyst utilized in many ammonia plants. Because of the relative inactivity of the iron oxide catalyst, the CO con- version had to be carried out at higher temperatures, with a resulting effluent carbon monoxide concentration of 3-4%. Then, a new low-temperature CO shift catalyst was developed using copper and zinc. The catalyst allowed a lower temperature for the CO shift reaction and allowed a more complete conversion of carbon monoxide to hydrogen, so that the effluent carbon mon- oxide concentration could be less than 1%. The disadvantage of the low- temperature shift catalyst was its extreme sensitivity to sulfur contaminants, so that extra care had to be taken to eliminate all detectable amounts of sulfur from the feed gas to the low temperature shift catalyst bed. A sulfided cobalt-molybdenum catalyst has been developed which is insensitive to sulfur contaminants and allows operation temperatures to be between those of the iron oxide and copper zinc catalysts. With the new catalyst, the residual CO concentration leaving the CO shift converter can be 1-1.5%, with no adverse effects. Because of the sulfur tolerance of the sulfided cobalt-moly catalyst, and the relatively good conversion of carbon monoxide to hydrogen, the sys- tem has been used for the ammonia plant discussed in this report. The synthesis gas from the gasification step contains sufficient water so that no additional steam is required for the CO conversion step. The feed from the synthesis gas generators is preheated by interchange with the process gas between beds of the CO shift conversion step. Because the CO shift reaction is exothermic and equilibrium is favored by lower temperatures, cooling is desirable between stages of the CO shift converter. For this reason, the reaction is carried out in two or three stages, with intercool- ing between stages, to achieve the most favorable equilibrium conditions and hence the lowest carbon monoxide -content in the effluent gas. Signifi- cant quantities of heat can be recovered from the CO shift converter efflu- ent, because it is at about 600°F and contains.a fairly large quantity of water vapor. During this heat recovery step, a considerable amount of con- densate is produced and is subsequently used as a feed to the gasifier scrub- bing and quench system. Any excess condensate from the heat recovery system is stripped of dissolved gases and used as a feed to a boiler feedwater system. 41 ------- After heat recovery, the effluent from the CO shift conversion step is further cooled to about 110°F before going to the carbon dioxide and hydro- gen sulfide removal system. (3) Acid Gas Removal System A number of different systems can be considered for the removal of acid gases from the effluent stream coming from the CO shift conversion step. The acid gases that need to be removed are hydrogen sulfide, carbon dioxide and carbonyl sulfide. For efficient operation of the ammonia plant, it is desir- able to get the impurities down to only a few ppm. Acid gas removal systems usually utilize either chemical absorption or physical absorption. Of the chemical absorption systems, the amine solvent (monoethanolamine [MEA]) is the most prevalent. One of the problems of using MEA is that is does not efficiently remove carbonyl sulfides. Furthermore, there is no convenient way of selectively separating the carbon dioxide and hydrogen sulfide that are produced when the amine solution is regenerated. Separation of these two acid gases is desirable so that: 1) a higher concentration of hydrogen sulfide can be utilized as feedstock to a Glaus sulfur conversion plant; and 2) a high-purity carbon dioxide byproduct stream may be made available as feed material for on-site urea manufacture. Another disadvantage of the amine systems is that they use relatively large amounts of energy for the regeneration step. Another common acid gas removal system is the hot potassium carbonate system. However, with such a scrubbing system it is difficult to get hydro- gen sulfide and carbon dioxide concentrations low enough in the effluent gases to be acceptable for an ammonia plant feed. Furthermore, there is no convenient way of separating the regenerated hydrogen sulfide from the carbon dioxide gas stream. The physical absorption systems appear to be more amenable to removing acid gases for an ammonia plant utilizing coal gasification as the synthesis gas source. One of the systems that has been used is the Rectisol system, which utilizes cold methanol as the physical absorbent. The Rectisol sys- tem has been used to purify synthesis gas produced from coal in South Africa. It has also been used in Germany to remove acid gases in some heavy oil partial oxidation processes in conjunction with ammonia and methanol synthesis. It is an efficient method for removing hydrogen sulfide, carbon dioxide, carbonyl sulfide, water, and other impurities from gas streams. The Rectisol process is based on the physical absorption of impurities in cold methanol (-20° to -40°F) by countercurrent scrubbing of the process gas in one or two stages. The methanol stream containing the impurities can then be readily generated in a number of stages to produce a high-purity carbon dioxide stream suitable for urea manufacture, or the carbon dioxide stream can be vented to the atmosphere without causing environmental problems. A concentrated hydrogen sulfide stream containing 25-30% hydrogen sulfide can also be produced. This concentration of hydrogen sulfide is quite suitable for efficient conversion to elemental sulfur in a standard Glaus conversion plant. 42 ------- The regeneration of the methanol used for scrubbing requires some inert gas for stripping of the material and also some regeneration by stripping of the methanol by reboiling methanol vapors. The inert gas-stripping material can, in this instance, be readily obtained from the byproduct nitrogen stream produced in the air separation plant associated with pro- ducing oxygen for the gasification step. Because water is also removed from the process gas stream by the Rectisol process, a water-methanol separation step is required. The water that is removed from the methanol solvent is disposed of in a conventional biological wastewater treatment system. Because the Rectisol process is a low-temperature physical absorption operation, the heats of solution associated with the absorption of the acid gases in the methanol must be removed. A system using ammonia has been considered to satisfy the refrigeration requirement. The tail gas, which is produced primarily from the inert gas stripping of the methanol' solvent, will normally have a concentration of less than 1% carbon monoxide and hydrogen, with a maximum of 5 ppm of hydrogen sulfide. This vent stream can normally be vented to the atmosphere. The Rectisol process normally requires five or six towers to effect the required separation and stripping. By proper use of efficient heat exchangers throughout the system, the energy requirements for carrying out the removal of acid gases from the synthesis gas can be kept to reasonably small quantities. (4) Final Synthesis Gas Purification and Composition Adjustment After the hydrogen sulfide and carbon dioxide have been removed from the synthesis gas, contaminants are still present, primarily carbon monoxide, argon and methane. For ammonia synthesis, it is necessary to remove the carbon monoxide impurities down to only a few ppm, because carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide are poisons for the ammonia synthesis catalyst. It is also necessary to add nitrogen to the predominantly hydrogen stream to achieve a 3:1 mole ratio between the materials. A nitrogen wash system is the most logical method of removing impurities and properly adjusting composition. In the nitrogen wash system,.the semi- purified synthesis gas from the acid gas removal system (the Rectisol system) is cooled in heat exchangers and is then contacted with liquid nitrogen. The liquid nitrogen removes the carbon monoxide, methane, and argon impurities and also allows the addition of nitrogen to the required composition. The nitrogen is available at minimum cost from the on-site air separation plant used for supplying the oxygen required for the gasifi- cation step. The low temperature required for the nitrogen scrubbing is produced without the use of a complex refrigeration cycle. The low temperatures required for the separation process are obtained by mixing the cool nitrogen with the scrubbed gas inside the low-temperature nitrogen wash facility. 43 ------- In the liquid nitrogen wash system, a residual gas is produced which contains some nitrogen and the impurities that were present in the feed synthesis gas. This gas, with a high enough concentration of combustibles, is often utilized as a supplemental fuel. The process has no external steam consumption (and no feed water treat- ment is needed for the steam) because the coal is fed in a water slurry. Thus, gasification steam is internally generated, but of course does require oxygen and coal consumption to supply the heat needed. About 99% of the carbon is gasified. The gasifier operating pressure of 1200 psi provides a significant savings in total ammonia process compression energy required. Most of the plants listed in Table IV-12 operate at atmospheric pressures, with the maximum pressure below 500 psi. Much less energy is required to compress the oxygen to 1200 psi than to compress the greater volume of synthesis gas to this level. Operation at this pressure level also provides advan- tages in the synthesis .gas purification train. The very pure synthesis gas from the gas purification train is com- pressed to 3000-4000 psi for ammonia synthesis. Storage for three months' production is included in the estimates. The gas is very low in methane, no steam reformer is needed to con- vert the methane to synthesis gas and, very importantly, the syngas con- tains no tars, phenols, or other high-molecular-weight byproducts that must be separated in the gas purification train and properly disposed of. The thermal balance indicates a need for an additional input of 187 million Btu per hour. Assuming a coal-fired boiler with an 80% efficiency (and using 10,870 Btu/lb for the raw coal), about 10 tons of coal/hr are needed to supply the deficit. This is equivalent to 0.24 ton/ton of ammonia. Cooling water circulation is estimated to be about 3.3 million gal/hr or 80,000 gal/ton of ammonia. Assuming a 5% makeup to the cooling tower, new water needs are 4,000 gal/ton. Power requirements are estimated to be 162 kWh/ton, including coal grinding but not mining. Compared to a plant for producing ammonia from natural gas, a coal plant would differ in the following respects. An air separation plant would be required. Oxygen would be used to gasify the coal. Equipment would also have to be added for handling the coal, grinding it finely, and storing it as a slurry for introduction into the reactor. Ash removal and disposal facilities would also have to be included. Essentially all of the ash would be blown down from the quench in the bottom of the reactor. A minor amount would carry over into the soot scrubber and be removed with the soot, which could then be recycled to the partial-oxidation reactor. The amount of carryover would be so small that it would not build up in the recycle stream. 44 ------- A high-sulfur coal can be utilized and the sulfur recovered in elemental form as a possible byproduct, though probably at low value. Assuming that one of the new sulfide-type shift catalysts is used, the hydrogen sulfide (which is how the sulfur would be generated) is removed and separated from the carbon dioxide by a cold methanol wash. The carbon dioxide can be recovered in a form pure enough for urea manufacture. b. Cost of Production Estimates of the capital investment and operating costs were prepared for a "grass roots" plant using a high-pressure coal partial oxidation process, with a capacity of 1000 tons per stream day, located in Southern Illinois where there are considerable deposits of coal near the ammonia market. Investments and operating costs are based on March 1975 cost con- ditions. The estimated cost of producing ammonia would be $77.95/ton, as shown in Table IV-14. Of this total, $27.26 (35%) represents the cost of energy inputs. About 26% of the total cost is attributable to the feed- stock itself, in this case a high sulfur coal. The other power and fuel inputs are needed to supply power in the air separation plant and the ammonia plant and for pump drives. This process can take advantage of the lower value of high sulfur coals, because as part of the process the hydrogen sulfide form is removed as a potentially marketable sulfur. c. Energy Usage The total energy consumption of this process, expressed in Btu equiv- alents, is 35.83 million Btu/ton of ammonia', as shown below: 106 Btu/Ton Feedstock 1.33 tons @ 10,870 Btu/lb 28.91 Fuel 0.24 tons @ 10,870 Btu/lb 5.22 Power 162 kWh @ 10,500 Btu/kWh 1.70 Total 35.83 The form of the energy used can vary considerable. We have based our analysis on the probable optimum situation. d. Effluent Controls Required for Coal Gasification Alternative The schematic representation of the process' considered here is shown in Figures IV-3 through IV-8. The nature of pollutant emissions are sum- marized in Tables IV-16, IV-17 and IV-18. The major environmental differ- ences between the base case and that of the partial oxidation of coal to supply synthesis gas are: 45 ------- TABLE IV-14 ESTIMATED PRODUCTION COST OF AMMONIA FROM COAL Producti Process: High Pressure Partial Oxidation Location i Soathem TTHnoia Capacity'- Annual Productioni 340.000 tons Stream Daya/Yr ! 340 VARIABLE COSTS Coal Feedstock* Coal Fuel* Electric Power Energy Subtotal Process Water (Consumption) Cooling (Circulating Rate). Catalysts & Chemicals Total SEMI-VARIABLE COSTS Direct Operating Labor (Wages) Direct Supervisory Wages Maintenance Labor, Materials & Supplies Labor Overhead Total P1XKJ) COSTS Plant Overhead Local Taxes & Insurance Depreciation Total TOTAL PRODUCTION COSTS Return on Investment (Pretax) POLLUTION CONTROL TOTAL Units Used in Costing or Annual Cost Basis Tons Tons kWh 1000 gallons 1000 gallons - 32 men 4 foremen 1 superintendent 4.5Z of invesc- ment/yr 35Z of labor & supervision 70Z of labor & supervision 1.5Z of invest- ment/yr 11 years, straight line 20Z of invest- ment/yr *Coal characteristics presented in Table IV- i 5 $/nnit $15.40 15.40 0.019 0.20 0.03 - $12,000/yr $18,000/yr S25,000/yr Dolts Consumed per Ton of Product 1.33 0.24 162 ' 0.42 80 - $/Ton of Product 20.48 3.70 3.08 27.26 0.08 2.40 0.45 30.19 1.13 0.21 0.07 13.38 0.49 — . - - iJS.28 0.99 4.46 27.03 - 32.48 77.95 59.47 8.65 146.07 46 ------- TABLE IV-15 ANALYSIS OF ILLINOIS NO. 6 COAL (%) Raw Coal As Received Basis Moisture 11.76 Ash 11.78 Sulfur 4.34 Btu 10,869 Dry Basis Ash 13.35 Volatile 38.60 Fixed Carbon 48.05 Sulfur 4.92 Btu 12,317 MAF Btu 14,215 Ultimate Analysis, Dry Basis Carbon 66.95 Hydrogen 4.79 Nitrogen 1.32 Chlorides 0.02 Sulfur 4.92 Oxygen 8.65 Mineral Analysis of Dry Ash. P2°5 °'61 Si02 46.49 Fe203 ' 28.09 A1203 20.02 Ti02 0.87 CaO 2.96 MgO 0.71 so3 o.io K20 0.01 Na20 0.05 Undetermined 0.09 Source: Private communication with Illinois coal company. 47. ------- Coal -o Surface Run Off Figure IV-3. Coal Receiving and Preparation Crushed Coal to Gasification Oxygen from Air Separation Plant Product Gas to Shift Conversion (H,, CO. HjS, COj, CH4. H,0, Acid Gas to Sulfur Recovery Figure .,IV-4. Gasification Nitrogen 48 ------- Product Gas From Scrubber BFW. Tail H5S Rich Tail c°! Gas Gas Gas i 1 -<3> Carbon Monoxide i ^ Steam '• ;, ^^^ ~SX ~\X ~X^ "v' Synthesis Gas to Compression Carbon Dioxide " ^nd Ammon.a _ Heat Recovery and H,S Nitrooen SynthBB Shift ^no" Cooling (~Y~Y-I \ "LLI r BFW , 1 Steam . Spent Removal Wash (Rectisol) li ~^D Nitrogen , , Water with Catalyst ' Condensate to For Str'PP'"9 Methanol Boiler Feed SepJ™m p,an, ^^ Water Treatment For Recycle "Boiler Feed Water Figure IV-5. Carbon Monoxide Shift and Synthesis Gas Purification BFW* Sulfur Rich Gas Stream Sulfur Recovery (Claus Plant) Steam Tail Gas Clean Up (Beaven or IFP) *Boiler Feed Water Molten Sulfur To Storage Figure IV-6. Sulfur Recovery 49 ------- BFW Purge used as Supplemental Fuel Synthesis Gas ^^^k 1 V1x I Condenser Waste Heat uJ Steam Boiler 1 T Compressor Circulator Ammonia Catalytic Converter Iron Oxide Catalyst Figure IV-7. Ammonia Synthesis Solids Scrubber Raw Water Purification (Ion Exchange) Recycle from Process Coal-Fired Boiler To Process Ash Boiler Slowdown Figure IV-8. Auxiliary Boiler 50 ------- TABLE IV-16 WATER EFFLUENTS - Ammonia from Coal Alternative Coal pile runoff T) Ash & slag pile runoff 3) Wastewater from Rectisol unit 4) Wastewater from sulfur recovery plant tail-gas cleanup Boiler blowdown (6) Boiler feedwater purification wastes (2) Coal-fired boiler stack gas scrubber water Method of Handling collected and treated treated treated 3 4 5, £ TABLE IV-17 AIR EMISSIONS - Ammonia from Coal Alternative Coal unloading facility emissions Coal grinding Inplant handling of coal System vents for pressure let-down Byproduct CO- Tail gas from Rectisol Sulfur-rich stream from Rectisol Tail gas from nitrogen wash Method of Handling Claus plant tail gas clean-up vent infrequent; flared potential for urea manufacture vented to sulfur recovery burned in boiler as supplemental fuel vented Byproduct molten sulfur (storage & transfer facilities) marketed Synthesis loop purge gas burned as supplemental fuel Stack gas from auxiliary coal-fired boiler scrubbed 51 ------- TABLE IV-18 Method of SOLID WASTES - Ammonia from Coal Alternative Handling (T| Slag |2| Catalyst from CO shift recovered |3| Molten sulfur marketed |4| Ash from auxiliary coal-fired boiler \5\ Scrubber water solids from auxiliary coal-fired boiler 161 Catalyst from ammonia converter • The use of a coal feedstock introduces the new source of particu- late emissions associated with coal-handling; • Surface runoff from the coal and slag piles must be collected and treated; • The slag generated must be disposed of in an acceptable manner; • The use of a coal feedstock will produce a sulfur-laden gas exhaust in synthesis gas purification which must be controlled using, for example, a Glaus plant with tail gas cleanup; and • The sulfur recovery plant will generate additional wastewater that must be treated. 'An additional and indirect environmental impact suggested by the change in feedstocks is that an auxiliary boiler used during startup and operation will be based on coal. (For the natural gas reforming process, the startup boiler would be based on natural gas.) The environmental impact of a coal- fired boiler is greater than that of a gas-fired boiler. However, because auxiliary boilers are not an integral part of the manufacturing process, they are not considered in detail under the scope of this study. Discharges would be those common to such boilers in any other facility. The details (emission rates, control technology, and cost of control) of water and air pollution, solid waste disposal, and other environmental concerns are discussed in the following sections of this report. For comparison, the environmental impact of the base case, use of natural gas in steam-methane reforming, is considered to be negligible. 52 ------- (1) Slag Pile Runoff Slag removed from the gasification unit would present a disposal problem. If the ammonia plant is not located within close proximity of the coal mine (where the ash can possibly be returned) it must be held on-site' in slag piles. As in the case of the coal storage pile runoff, the slag pile may pre- sent a water pollution problem. As shown in Table IV-19, both ash and slag contain a variety of heavy metals, many of which are leachable in water. The runoff would also contain large quantities of suspended solids result- ing from fine ash particles being carried away with the water. Again, the composition of the runoff is very difficult to predict. Slag would be generated at a rate of 62,000 tons per year. A storage area capable of containing a 15-year accumulation would occupy an area of approximately 26.5 acres. A yearly rainfall rate of 33 inches per year would result in an estimated average runoff flowrate of 81,000 gallons per day (including 25% additional capacity), and the treatment system would require appropriate retention basins. (2> Cooling Tower Slowdown The coal-gasification-based ammonia plant has a cooling water circula- tion rate of 80 million gpd. Typically, cooling water is recirculated in a tight recycle loop. Based on a cooling water blowdown rate of 1%, the cooling tower blowdown flowrate is 800,000 gpd. Due to the concentrating effect of the whole cooling circuit, inorganic salts present in the water supply would be greatly concentrated. Also, and more important from a pollutional point of view, there would be the presence of cooling water corrosion inhibitors. In particular, if chromate corrosion inhibitors are used, the cooling tower blowdown would have to be treated prior to discharge. e. Environmental Effects Related to Water Pollution The coal gasification alternative generates the following wastewater streams (excluding mining): • Coal pile runoff, • Slag and ash pile runoff, • Cooling tower blowdown, and • Wastewater from the synthesis gas purification system. 53 ------- TABLE IV-19 ELEMENTAL DISTRIBUTION IN COAL, SLAG, AND FLY ASH Element concentration, ppm Coal 10,440 4.45 65 3.7 4,340 0.47 8.2 914 2.9 18 1.1 8.3 0.1 10,850 4.5 0.4 0.122 1,540 3.8 1,210 33.8 696 16 4.9 15.5 0.5 2.2 2.2 23,100 1.0 23 0.11 2.1 506 2.18 28.5 46 Slag 102,300 18 500 2 46,000 1.1 84 <100 20.8 152 7.7 20 1.1 112,000 5 4.6 0.028 15,800 42 12,400 295 5,000 85 6.2 102 0.64 20.8 .080 229,000 8.2 170 0.95 15 4,100 14.9 260 100 Outlet Fly Ash 76,000 440 750 32,000 51 120 65 900 27 1.3 150,000 5.0 24,000 42 430 11,300 650 190 55 36 88 9 1.8 26 10,000 1,180 5,900 Al As Ba Br Ca Cd Ce Cl Co Cr Cs Cu Eu Fe Ga Hf Hg K La Mg Mn Na Ni Pb Kb Sb Sc Se Si Sm Sr Ta Th Ti U V Zn Source: Klein, D.H. et al, "Pathways of Thirty-seven Trace Elements Through Coal-Fired Power Plants", Environ. Sci. & Tech., 9^: 10, pp 973-978, 1975 54 ------- (1) Coal Pile Runoff In the coal gasification alternative, approximately 122,000 tons of coal (a three month supply) are stockpiled on site. Rainwater runoff from the coal pile would contain coal particulates, organic and inorganic com- pounds leached out of the coal by the rainwater, and oxidation reaction products.* The exact composition of the coal pile runoff is difficult to predict, as it is heavily dependent on the type of coal, rainfall occurence, and type of storage. However, there are a variety of heavy metals and sul- fur compounds present in coal. Bacterial action taking place within the wet coal pile very likely would oxidize some of the sulfur compounds into sulfates, thus causing the runoff water to be slight acidic, not unlike acidic mine drainage. The presence of leached heavy metals and acidity in the runoff water would require that the runoff water be collected and treated prior to discharge. Based on a coal pile occupying 6.3 acres, and an average yearly'rain- fall of 33 inches per year, the estimated average daily flow of coal pile runoff water would be approximately 19,000 gpd (including 25% additional capacity). The system for treating runoff water is based on using a retention lagoon to contain the high flow rates that would result from heavy rains and pumping from the lagoon through the wastewater treatment plant at a lower average rate. In this way, capital investment cost for the waste- water treatment would be lowered. (2) Synthesis Gas Purification System Wastewater The carbon dioxide a-*d hydrogen sulfide removal system (Rectisol) and the sulfur recovery plant: t:..il gas cleanup system produce wastewater streams that must be treated. The Rectisol unit will enerate a wastewater stream containing an estimated 2% concentration o.: methanol. The sulfur-recovery tail gas cleanup unit will generate a wastewater stream containing hydrogen sulfide (at approximately 50 mg/1 concentration), carbon dioxide, and possibly small quantities of organic material. *"Potential Pollutants from Fossil Fuel Conversion Processes" by the Exxon Government Research Laboratory, EPA Contract No. 68-02-0629. 55 ------- An estimate of the volume and composition of these streams is: Wastewater from Wastewater from Sulfur Recovery C02 and H2S Plant Tail Gas Removal System Cleanup Total Flowrate (gpd) 10,000 8,000 18,000 Methanol (Ib/day) 1,680 - 1,680 Hydrogen sulfide (Ib/day) - 3.4 3.4 Estimated BOD5 (Ib/day) 1,350 650 2,000 (including misc. organics) (3) Other Ammonia Production System Wastewaters There are a number of wastewater streams from the ammonia production unit (described earlier in this report under the base case technology), including process water treatment plant effluent, boiler blowdown, and process con- densate. Because the same ammonia production units are used for each of the process alternatives, there will be no significant difference in either waste- water flowrate or composition. Thus, comparing effluent loadings and waste- water treatment costs, the ammonia production unit essentially cancels out. In the comparisons that follow, effluent loadings and wastewater treatment costs are incremental to those of the base case — natural gas as feedstock for ammonia production. (4) Miscellaneous Wastewater Streams In addition to the above, the coal gasification alternative will produce from an auxiliary coal-fired boiler a boiler blowdown streamt an ion- exchange spent-regenerant brine stream and a stack gas scrubber water stream. Study of these streams is outside the scope of this study. As noted earlier, these wastes are those generated by such a boiler system at any facility. f. Wastewater Treatment Technology (1) Runoff and Cooling Tower Blowdown Treatment The coal pile runoff contains acid, soluble heavy metals and organics; the slag pile contains heavy metals; and the cooling tower blowdown may contain chromium. Because all three of the wastewaters can be treated with lime to both neutralize the acidity and precipitate the heavy metals, they can be combined in a single wastewater stream with a 900,000 gpd flowrate. 56 ------- A conceptual process configuration of the coal storage and slag pile runoff collection system would consist of, • An earthen dike around the perimeter of the storage areas; • Collection pumps with pumping equipment; • Piping; • A retention basin capable of containing the short-term runoff from a severe storm; and • A pumping system capable of feeding water from the retention basin to the treatment plant at a controlled rate. The coal storage area and the slag disposal area each would have their own runoff collection system. The total runoff water would be combined with the cooling tower blowdown stream and then sent to the wastewater treatment plant. The wastewater treatment plant would consist of: • A 24-hour equalization basin, • A solids recirculation clarifier, and • A chemical feed system. The chemical feed system would consist of a sulfur dioxide feeder (for the reduction of hexavalent chromium to trivalent chromium) and a lime feeder. The precipitated metals would be removed as a sludge from the clarifier. The wastewater treatment system would have the following estimated chemi- cal and energy consumption: Hydrated lime - 255 ton/yr Sulfur dioxide - 75 ton/yr Electricity - 342,120 kWh/yr and would generate an estimated 17,800 tons per year of wet sludge containing 10 percent solids. (2) Synthesis Gas Purification Wastewater Treatment Wastewaters from the units contain biodegradable material (methanol is highly biodegradable, while hydrogen sulfide is somewhat biodegradable in low concentrations), and as such can be treated in a conventional biological treatment system. A biological treatment system capable of treating this wastewater is envisioned to consist of the following: 57 ------- • A 24-hour equalization basin; • A 15-day aerated lagoon; • A 15-day non-aerated lagoon; and • A nutrient feed system. Ammonia and phosphoric acid would have to be fed to the wastewater system to supply nutrients to the microorganisms. Excess microorganisms accumulating in the non-aerated basin would be periodically removed as a sludge. The wastewater treatment system would have the following estimated chemi- cal and energy consumption: Ammonia - 2.05 ton/yr Phosphoric acid - 1.1 ton/yr Electricity - 304,400 kWh/yr and would produce 365 tons per year of wet sludge. With proper operation, the wastewater treatment facility should be able to effect a 90% BOD^ removal, because no unusual biotoxicants are believed to be present, in which case the effluent BOD5 loading is estimated to be 200 pounds per day. g. Wastewater Treatment Cost Estimated wastewater treatment costs are presented in Table IV-21. As can be seen from Table IV-20, 95% of the wastewater treatment cost is asso- ciated with runoff treatment. The capital investment for this portion of the treatment breaks down as follows: Coal storage diking and collection system $1,358,000 Slag pile diking and collection system 2,789,000 Wastewater treatment plant 582,000 Total $4,429,000 Thus over 60% of the total treatment cost is associated with controlling runoff from the disposal of slag. If specific conditions permit the slag to be disposed of without a runoff collection and treatment system, the estimated cost of wastewater treatment would be lowered considerably. ------- TABLE IV-20 COAL GASIFICATION ALTERNATIVE- WASTEWATER TREATMENT COST ESTIMATES (BASIS: 1000 TPD AMMONIA PRODUCTION) CAPITAL INVESTMENT INDIRECT COSTS Depreciation (@9.1%) Return on Investment (@2D%) Taxes and Insurance (@2%) TOTAL INDIRECT COST DIRECT OPERATING COST Treatment of Wastewater from Runoff $4,429,000 403,000 886,000 89,000 $1,378,000 Treatment of Wastewater from Synthesis Gas Purification System $200,000 18,200 40,000 4,000 $ 62,200 Total Wastewater Treatment Cost $4,629,000 421,200 926,000 93.000 $1,440,200 Operating Labor (plus OHD) Maintenance (Labor & Supplies) Chemicals Electric Power (@ $0.02/kwh) Sludge Disposal (@ $5.00/ton) TOTAL DIRECT OPERATING COST TOTAL ANNUAL COST UNIT COST C$/ton of ammonia) 66,300 67,600 40,500 8,000 89,000 $ 271,400 $1,649,400 $4.85 16,500 8,000 900 6,100 1,800 $ 33,300 $ 95,500 $0.28 82,800 75,600 41,400 14,100 90,800 $ 304,700 $1,744,900 $5.13 SOURCE: ADL Estimates 59 ------- h. Environmental Effects Related to Air Pollution The switch to partial oxidation using a coal feedstock, rather than steam reforming using natural gas, is expected to have the following impacts on air pollution control (excluding mining and transportation): • Coal receiving and storage - the use of coal as a feedstock will require facilities for unloading and storage, coal grinding, and conveying to the process, all of which generate particulate emissions; • Synthesis gas^preduction - the use of coal as a feedstock introduces significant sulfur which is removed from the synthesis gas and which is then removed from exhausts venting to the atmosphere; • Ammonia production, storage, and loading - the emissions from the ammonia manufacturing operations are the same for the partial oxidation process as those described earlier in this report under the base case technology. There is no significant difference in the environmental impact of the two cases. A comparison of the emission factors for each feedstock is given in Table IV-21. The switch to a coal feedstock introduces a new pollutant emission in most cases,, as opposed to an increase or reduction in an existing pollutant.. The ammonia synthesis loop, storage and loading are considered to be equivalent for technologies based on natural gas or coal. While the sources must be controlled using, for example, scrubbers on ammonia leaks from storage and loading, flares or afterburners for intermittent plant residue gas, and so on, there is no evidence to suggest that these sources are significantly larger or smaller than comparable sources in plants using natural gas feedstock and, for this reason, these sources are not considered in detail here. Additional information is provided under the base case. (1) Receiving and Storage One of the common air pollution problems associated with the use of coal is its tendency to form a fine dust. Operations within a plant specifically causing this problem are: • Unloading of railroad cars, • Coal storage, • Coal grinding, and • Coal conveying. 60 ------- TABLE IV-21 SUMMARY OF AIR POLLUTION EMISSION FACTORS Emission E.ate (Ib/ton) Source Receiving and Storage - Coal Unloading - Coal Storage - Coal Grinding - Material Handling Synthesis Gas Production - Tail Gas - Pressure Let Down Ammonia Production, Storage, Loading - Purge Gas - Storage and Loading Pollutant particulate fugitive particulate particulate particulate Natural Gas CO, CH4 NH,, 3 90 Coal unk. unk. unk. unk. <0.2 Control Technology Fabric Filter Fabric Filter Fabric Filter Sulfur recovery plant with tail gas cleanup unk. Flare Wet scrubber or use as 90f fuel 2 Wet scrubber ------- In the case of car dumping and coal grinding, the source is at a single point in the plant where it can be controlled using an appropriate hood and fabric filter. The capital costs for such systems are not related to the size of the plant, but rather to the size of a typical railroad car itself. The estimated capital and annualized operating costs for the two control requirements are shown in Table IV-22. The control of dusting associated with the coal storage piles is much more difficult, because coal piles can spread over as much as six acres, making hooding or collection of particular emissions virtually impossible. In this case, the industry has resorted to the use of sprays to wet down the surface coal piles to minimize dusting. The costs of such systems are only a minor part of the equipment found within a coal yard and are generally included as a part of the coal handling apparatus. Dust emission during conveying of coal to different parts of the plant is also a fugitive emission source which is not confined to a single spot in the plant and is therefore difficult to collect. In most cases, the control of such emissions is limited to the use of covered conveying belts to minimize dust losses. The cost of such a system would depend also entirely on the length of the conveyor and the corresponding cost for fabrication and erec- tion of the ducting required to collect the emissions. At the present time, control of this type of fugitive emission is not required, and we have not included the costs of such controls in our estimate of the environmental costs for the ammonia industry. (2) Synthesis Gas Production The major emission associated with the production of synthesis is the highly concentrated, sulfur-laden exhaust from the acid gas removal system. An approximate sulfur balance for the synthesis gas production is shown in Table IV-23. The amount of sulfur in the acid gas exhaust is about 60 long tons/day, which is large enough to require sulfur control using, for example, a Glaus process. Because several states have emission standards regulating the tailgas from sulfur recovery plants, we have assumed that tail gas cleanup will also be required. The combination is expected to reduce the plant sulfur emissions to about 150 ppm. The cost of sulfur recovery plant plus tail gas cleanup is shown in Figure IV-9. These costs, which appear to be high, are based on information obtained by EPA.* The operating costs for such a plant are shown in Table IV-24. With sulfur credited at $25/long ton, the cost for control is $2.97/ton of ammonia. *Standard Support and Environmental Impact Document, April 1975. 62 ------- TABLE IV-22 CAPITAL AND OPERATING COSTS FOR COAL HANDLING PARTICIPATE CONTROL Coal Gasification Alternative (534,000 ton/yr of coal) CAPITAL COSTS $460,000 ANNUAL OPERATING COST, $/Yr Indirect Operating Costs - Depreciation 41,800 - Return on Investment (@ 20%) 92,000 - Insurances and Taxes (@ 2%) 9,200 TOTAL INDIRECT COSTS $143,000 Direct Operating Costs - Labor Direct (@ 450 Man-Hours/Yr, $6.00/hr 2,700 Supervision (@ 15% of Direct) 400 Labor Overhead (@ 35% of Direct and Supervision) 1,100 Plant Overhead (@ 70% of Direct and Supervision) 2,200 - Maintenance «? 5% of Capital) 23,000 Electric Power (@ $0.02/Kwh, 240,000 Kwh/Yr) 4,800 Fabric Replacement 8,000 TOTAL DIRECT COSTS $42,200 TOTAL ANNUAL COST, $/Yr $185,200 UNIT COST, $/Ton of Ammonia ' $0.54 SOURCE: ADL Estimates 63 ------- TABLE IV-23 APPROXIMATE SULFUR BALANCE, TPD (BASIS: 1000 TPD AMMONIA) Plant Stream Coal Feed Acid Gas Removal Exhaust (to Sulfur Recovery) Sulfur Recovery Plant Exhaust - Glaus Plant Exhaust - Tailgas Cleanup Exhaust (to Flare) Molten Sulfur Product Total Weight TPD 1350 187 66.3 Sulfur Load 4.92% 35.5 2000 ppm 150 ppm 100% Sulfur Weight TPD 66.4 (66.4) ( 3.3) 66.3 10.0 8.0 6.0 4.0 Capital Investment, $ Millions 1.0 O.B 0.6 0.4 0.2 J 1 1 I I l I l I 10 I I I Long Ton/Day Sulfur Capacity Figure iy-9. Capital Investment — Glaus Plant (Including Tail Gas Cleanup) SOURCE: Arthur D. Little, Inc., estimates 64 ------- TABLE IV-24 SULFUR CONTROL COSTS FOR ACID GAS EXHAUST Coal Gasification Alternative (BASIS: 1000 TPD of Ammonia, 60 LT/D of Sulfur) CAPITAL COSTS. ($1.OOP's) $3,600 ANNUAL OPERATING COST. $l,QOO's/Yr Indirect Operating Costs - Depreciation, 11 years $327 - Return on Investment (@ 20%) 720 - Insurance and Taxes (@ 2%) 72 TOTAL INDIRECT COSTS $1,119 Direct Operating Costs - Labor Direct (@ $6.00/Hr, 1 Man/Shift) 50 Supervision (@ 15% of Direct Labor) 7 Labor Overhead (@ 35% of Direct and Supervision) 20 Plant Overhead (@ 70% of Direct and Supervision) 39 - Maintenance «§ 5 %) 180 - Utilities Electric Power (@ 140 kWh/LT, $0.02/kWh) 57 Fuel (@ 0.8 x 106 Btu/LT, $2.00/106 Btu) 33 Cooling Water (@ 20,000 gal/LT, $0.03/103 gal) 12 - Chemicals (@ $2.50/LT in tailgas) 3 TOTAL DIRECT COSTS $401 Byproduct Sulfur Credit (@ $25/LT , 60 LT/D) (510) TOTAL ANNUAL COST, $l,000's/Yr $1,010 UNIT COST, $/Ton NH3 $2.97 SOURCE: ADL Estimates 65 ------- (3) Ammonia Production, Storage and Loading The environmental problems associated with ammonia production, storage, and loading are described earlier under the base-case techology. The problems associated with partial oxidation are identical and the costs will be the same. We have not included here a quantitative estimate of the pollutant loads or environmental costs, because they do not result in a net change between the two technologies. However, to place the costs in per- spective, we would estimate that the costs for the miscellaneous scrubbers or flares necessary to control a typical 1,000 ton/day ammonia plant would amount to less than 5% of the control costs for other air pollution emission sources. i. Environmental Effects Related to Solid Waste Disposal As discussed previously, the major solid waste stream is slag. Added to this are smaller quantities of sludges from the wastewater treatment plant. The total annual quantities of solid waste are: Slag - 62,000 ton/yr Runoff treatment plant sludge - 17,800 ton/yr Synthesis gas purification wastewater plant sludge - 365 ton/yr The cost for disposal of these wastes is included as part of the wastewater control costs. In addition the catalysts occasionally replaced are: CO shift conversion catalyst - recovered Acid gas removal system catalyst - recovered Ammonia converter catalyst (iron oxid - not recovered 4. Production of Ammonia from Heavy Fuel Oil a. Process Description In the early 1950*s, industrial processes were developed for producing a synthesis gas, carbon monoxide and hydrogen by the partial oxidation of hydrocarbons, a process which is applicable to materials ranging from methane to heavy petroleum residuals. The basic concept consists of reacting the hydrocarbon with oxygen in the presence of steam at a tempera- ture of 2000 6 - 2500°F. The following reactions take place: C H + (m/2)00 - nCO + (m/2)H0 n m 2. i C H + nH,0 = nCO + (n + m/2)H_ n m 2. 2. 66 ------- Carbon dioxide is also formed and the entire reaction mixture ±s essentially at thermodynamic equilibrium at the temperature involved. Minor amounts of methane are present in the product gas, corresponding to equilib- rium conditions, and - depending on the composition of the hydrocarbons - some amounts of hydrogen sulfide, carbonyl sulfide, and ammonia will be present. In carrying out the reaction, the ratio of oxygen to hydrocarbon is optimized to achieve the desired temperature under adiabatic conditions which will give maximum conversion to CO and H2. These conditions usually result in 1-3% of the carbon in the hydrocarbon being converted to solid carbon (soot) in the reaction. The hot gas from the reactor is rapidly quenched to 350°-400°F to "freeze" the composition and to cool it for further processing. The suspended carbon is then removed and the crude synthesis gas is processed in a manner identical to that described in the preceeding section for the coal-based plant. Major steps in the process are: • Shift Reaction - The carbon monoxide is used to convert water to hydrogen over an Mo-Co sulfide catalyst. CO + H20 •*• C02 + H2 • Heat Recovery - Thermal energy is recovered from hot process gas, leaving the shift converter in the form of steam and pre-heated boiler feedwater. • Acid Gas Removal - Hydrogen sulfide and carbon dioxide are removed by a process such as the Rectisol, which uses methanol to absorb the gases and separate them into a C02 stream containing 5 ppm H2S and a hydrogen sulfide-rich stream containing about 35% H2S and 65% COo. As a pollution conttol measure, the hydrogen sulfide is converted to elemental sulfur in a Glaus plant. • Final Gas Purification - Small amounts of CO and CH* are removed from the gas by scrubbing with liquid nitrogen. Sufficient nitro- gen is vaporized to produce a 3:1 hydrogen-to-nitrogen mixture in the purified gas. • Compression and Synthesis - The hydrogen-nitrogen mixture is- com- pressed to 2500-3500 psig and introduced into the synthesis loop where ammonia is catalytically formed as described earlier. 3H2 + N2 -»• 2NH3 • Air Separation - An air separation plant is necessary to provide the oxygen and nitrogen used in the process. 67 ------- There are two commercial versions of the oil gasification process which have been adequately proven in many refinery applications for hydrogen pro- duction so that they can be considered for ammonia plant use. One has been developed by Texaco, and the other by the Shell Oil Company. Both can operate at pressures ranging from atmospheric to over 1500 psi, the higher pressures being of interest for ammonia synthesis to minimize overall power consumption, and both can handle a wide range of feedstocks. The major differences between the two lie in the manner in which the gas is quenched and in the manner in which the soot is handled. In the Shell process, a unique type of heat exchanger, designed to prevent soot deposition, is used to quench the gas and generate high pressure steam. The cooled gas is further quenched with water, then scrubbed to remove the soot. The water/carbon slurry is flashed to atmospheric pressure and mixed with fuel oil which agglomerates the carbon. The mixture is pelletized, separated from the water,and the pellets are mixed with the fuel oil feed to the burner-reactor. Thus, the carbon is recycled to extinction. In the Texaco version, shown schematically in Figure IV-10, the hot burner gas is quenched by direct injection of water. A large part of the water is converted to steam which is needed in the shift conversion section of the plant. The latent heat of the surplus steam is recovered in the heat recovery section. It is also possible to use a heat exchanger for high- pressure steam generation and to quench the gas in the Texaco process, but this technique is not normally used if the gas is to be shifted to form hydrogen. Most of the carbon is removed in the quench operation and the final traces are separated in a high-shear venturi scrubber. The sooty water is contacted with naphtha, which preferentially wets the carbon so that a decanter will produce a carbon-free water and a naphtha layer containing the carbon. The naphtha/carbon mixture is mixed with a part of the heavy oil feed and the naphtha is then distilled off for recycle leaving the carbon in the fuel oil. The oil/carbon mixture is normally recycled to the reactor, but can be burned as boiler fuel if low sulfur oil is used. Naphtha makeup is 0.1-0.2% of the total heavy oil feed to the process. The water from the decanter is recycled to the scrubber but to prevent buildup of ash and soluble inorganic materials introduced as impurities in the heavy oil feed, a purge or blowdown is necessary. b. Cost of Production Based on a plant with a capacity of 1000 tons/stream day which would produce 340,000 tons of ammonia per year; a mid-west location; and March 1975 energy and fuel costs; the estimated cost of producing ammonia would be $106.15/ton, as shown in Table IV-25. Of this total cost, $70.36 (66%) represents the cost of energy inputs. About 48% of the cost is attributed to the feedstock itself, in this case a high sulfur residual oil. The other fuel and power inputs are needed to supply motive steam for turbine drives in the air separation plant and the ammonia plant and for pump drives. 68 ------- Source: Texaco Development Corporation Oxygen A Water Preheater Heavy Oil Naphtha A Generator T Preheater Water and Carbon Naphtha Naphtha and Carbon Steam Separator Water Water Stripper -»- Product Gas Oil Stripper Recycle to Generator "] Process Feed | ' Preheaters i Oil and Carbon Plant Boiler Water Slowdown Figure IV-10. Synthesis Gas Generation Including Recovery of Unconverted Carbon ------- TABLE IV-25 ESTIMATED PRODUCTION COST OF AMMONIA FROM RESIDUAL FUEL OIL Product: Ammonia Partial Oxidation of Residual Process; FuelOil Location! Mid-West „ . Fixed Investment! $70,600,000 Annual/ *" • 100° ton /stream day Capacity' Annual Productioni 340.000 tons stream Davs/Yr.: 340 VARIABLE COSTS Residual Fuel Oil Feedstock (6.2%S) Fuel, Low Sulfur Naptha Power Energy Subtotal Catalysts & Chemicals Cooling Water Circulation Process Water Total SEMI-VARIABLE COSTS Operating Labor Supervision Labor Overhead Maintenance Total FIXED COSTS Plant Overhead .Local Taxes & Insurance Depreciation Total TOTAL PRODUCTION COST Return on Investment (Pretax) POLLUTION CONTROL TOTAL /i •* Units Used or Anual Basis Bbl Bbl Gal Kwh thousands of gallons thousands of gallons 28 men 4 foremen 1 superintendent 35% of labor & supervision 4% of investment/ yr 1 1 70% of labor & supervision 1.5% of investment/ yr 11 years, straight line 20% of investment/ yr $/Unit (i ^ 11.97U) 15.12 0.35 0.0165 0.03 0.20 $12,000/yr. $18,000/yr. $25,000/yr. Units/Ton of NH3 4.27 1.08 3.5 103 76 0.74 $/Ton NH3 51.11 16.33 1.22 1.70 70.36 0.45 2.28 0.15 73.24 0.99 0.21 0.07 0.45 8.31 10.03 0.89 3.11 18.88 22.88 106.15 41.53 3.46 151.14 Based on $1.90/million BTU for high sulfur fuel oil, $2.40 for low sulfur oil and 6.3 million Btu/bbl. 70 ------- The makeup naphtha used for the soot removal cycle is considered as an energy input because this makeup replaces that left in the heavy oil sent to the reactor. This process can take advantage of the lower cost of high sulfur residual oil, because (as part of the process) the hydrogen sulfide formed is removed in a form amenable to conversion to marketable sulfur in a Glaus process plant. However, supplemental steam must be based on higher cost low sulfur oil, because removal of sulfur oxides from the stack gas of the boiler.is not economically feasible with the current alternatives for this size unit. Con- sideration has been given to incorporating the flue gas into the Glaus plant feed, but the dilution effects of the low sulfur oxide gas, combined with the power consumption of blowers, make this alternative uneconomical compared to purchasing low sulfur fuel. c. Energy Usage The total energy consumption of the process, expressed in equivalent British thermal units is 35.24 million Btu/ton of ammonia, as shown below: 106 Btu/ton Feedstock 4.27 bbl @ 6.3 x 106 Btu/bbl 26.90 Fuel 1.08 bbl @ 6.3 x 106 Btu/bbl 6.80 Naphtha 3.5 gal at 130,000 Btu/gal 0.46 Power 103 kWh @ 10,500 Btu/kWh 1.08 Total 35.24 The form of energy used can be varied considerably depending on the relative value of the energy forms and the cost of capital. For example, instead of using a boiler fired with low sulfur oil to generate steam for turbine drives, some turbines could be replaced with electric motors to the extent that essentially no fuel would be needed except for startup steam. Power consumption, of course, would increase drastically and total production costs would also increase, as would total energy, expressed as Btu, using 10,500 Btu as the fuel input to produce 1 kWh. The probable optimum situation is as developed above. d. Effluent Controls Required for Heavy Oil Gasification Alternative The schematic representation of the process considered here is shown in Figures IV-10, -11, -12, and -13. The nature of the pollutant emissions are summarized in Tables IV-26, IV-27, and IV-28. 71 ------- BFW CO2 Tail Gas Product Gas From Scrubber (See Figure IV-10) Carbon Monoxide Shift Steam to Heat Recovery And Cooling -m BFW Spent Catalyst *Boiler Feed Water Steam H2SRich Gas Tail Gas Carbon Dioxide and H2S Removal (Rectisol) Condensate to Boiler Feed Water Treatment For Recycle Nitrogen For Stripping From Air Separation Plant Nitrogen Wash Water with Methanol Synthesis Gas to Compression And Ammonia Synthesis Nitrogen from Air Separation Plant Figure IV-11. Carbon Monoxide Shift and Synthesis Gas Purification ------- BFW Sulfur Rich Gas Stream Sulfur Recovery (Glaus Plant) Steam 2 - Tail Gas Clean Up (Beaven or IFP) Molten Sulfur To Storage "Boiler Feed Water Figure IV-12. Sulfur Recovery BFW Purge used as Supplemental Fuel Synthesis Gas Condenser Waste Heat Boiler Steam Compressor and Circulator Ammonia Catalytic Converter Iron Oxide Catalyst Figure TV-13. Ammonia Synthesis 73 ------- TABLE IV-26 , , , 'Method of WATER EFFLUENTS* -AMMONIA-FROM-HEAVY OIL ALTERNATIVE Handling Soot recycle system purge treated Waste water from Rectisol unit treated Waste water from sulfur recovery plant tail-gas cleanup treated TABLE IV-27 AIR EMISSIONS* - AMMONIA-FROM-HEAVY OIL ALTERNATIVE System vents for pressure let-down Byproduct CO Tail gas from Rectisol Sulfur-rich stream from Rectisol Tail gas from nitrogen wash Glaus plant tail gas cleanup vent Method of Handling infrequent; flared potential for urea manufacture vented to sulfur recovery burned in boiler as supplemental fuel vented Byproduct molten sulfur (storage & transfer facilities) marketed Synthesis loop purge gas TABLE IV-28 SOLID WASTES* - AMMONIA-FROM-HEAVY OIL ALTERNATIVE T] Catalyst from CO shift 2| Molten sulfur burned as supple- mental fuel Method of Handling recovered marketed *Keyed to Figures IV-10, 11, 12 and 13 74 ------- The gasification of heavy oil results in the following changes in environmental input from those discussed in the corresponding section for the natural gas base case: • A sulfur recovery plant will be required, though it will be somewhat smaller than the one for the coal alternative; and • An additional wastewater stream, the soot recycle system blowdown, must be treated. These specific changes are discussed below. e. Environmental Effects Related to Watery pollution The gasification of heavy oil can be compared to gasification of coal in the following ways: • The synthesis gas purification system waste stream has the same flows and approximate characteristics; • There is no runoff in the oil alternative; and • The wastewater from the sulfur recovery process is about 70% of the flow from the coal unit. In addition, the oil gasification unit must treat the purge from the soot recycle system. The characteristics of this stream are presented in Table IV-29- The total wastewater load (gallons per day) for the oil alternative is: Cooling Tower Blowdown 800,000 Rectisol Purge 10,000 Tail Gas Cleanup Purge 6,000 Soot Recycle System Purge 41,000 There would also be a wastewater load associated with the ammonia produc- tion unit. The stream is the same for all alternatives, so it has not been included in the comparison. • Wastewater Treatment Technology - While the biochemical oxygen demand of the wastewater has not been determined, the wastewater contains biodegradable substances and can be subjected to biological treat- ment. Most likely, a treatment system quite similar to that used to treat the wastewater from the synthesis gas purification waste- water treatment in the coal gasification alternative could be employed. The treatment system would consist of: 75 ------- TABLE IV-29 SOOT RECYCLE SYSTEM SLOWDOWN Volume ,-jv 41,000 gpd Composition ppm Ash 0.1 H2S 25 TDS 5000 NH3 300 Hydrocarbons 10 (1)0il basis used Sulfur 6.2 percent NaCl 30 ppm Ash 200 ppm Source: Schlinger, W.G. and Slater, W.L., Application of the Texaco Synthesis Gas Generation Process Using High Sulfur Residual Oils as Feedstock. Paper No. 1542, Texaco Inc., Montebello Research Laboratory, Montebello, California. • A 24-hour equalization basin; • A 15-day aerated lagoon; • A 15-day non-aerated (anaerobic) lagoon; and • A chemical feed system. In the treatment process, ammonia would be removed by 'a combination of air stripping and biological oxidation to nitrate followed by denitrification. To effect denitrification, sufficient carbon must be present; so it is possible that supplementary methanol would have to be added to the non-aerated lagoon. With proper operation, it should be possible to achieve a 90% removal of ammonia and hydrogen sulfide, thus producing an effluent containing 30 ppm ammonia and 2.5 ppm hydrogen sulfide. Wastewater'Treatment Costs - Treatment costs are presented in Table IV-30. 76 ------- TABLE IV- 30 OIL GASIFICATION ALTERNATIVE INCREMENTAL WASTEWATER TREATMENT COST ESTIMATES (BASIS: 1000 TPD AMMONIA PRODUCTION) CAPITAL INVESTMENT. $ ANNUAL OPERATING COSTS INDIRECT COSTS Depreciation Return on Investment (@ 202) Taxes and Insurance (@ 2%) TOTAL INDIRECT COSTS DIRECT COSTS Operating Labor Maintenance Chemicals Electric Power Sludge Disposal TOTAL DIRECT COSTS TOTAL ANNUAL COST UNIT COST, ($/Ton) Synthesis Gas Purification System Wastewater $186,000 Soot Recycle System Slowdown $350,000 Total $536,000 16,900 37,200 3,700 $57,800 14,700 7,100 800 5,400 1,600 $29,600 $87,400 $0.26 31,800 70,000 7,000 $108,800 16,500 14,000 2,500 13,900 1,000 $47,900 $156,800 $0.46 48,700 107 , 200 10,700 $166,600 31,200 21,100 3,300 19,300 2,600 $77,500 $244,200 $0.72 SOURCE: ADL Estimates ------- f. Environmental Effects Relating to Air Pollution The air pollution associated with oil gasification is less than that associated with coal in that there is no coal-related dust source. The only air emission of significance is the sulfur-laden exhaust from the carbon dioxide and hydrogen sulfide removal exhaust. The stream must be controlled using a sulfur recovery plant with a tail gas cleanup plant. The capital costs of, the sulfur recovery process were shown in Figure IV-9. For an oil feed- stock, the plant would produce about 42 tons of sulfur per day as opposed to 60 tpd produced with coal. The operating costs are shown in detail in Table IV-31. The resulting cost of $2.74/ton of ammonia is only slightly less than the cost of sulfur control relating to the coal alternative. g. Environmental Effects Relating to Soj.id Wastg Disposal The wastewater treatment system will produce very little sludge because of the low quantity of BOD present. We estimate that less than 200 tons per year of wet sludge would be generated by the wastewater treatment plant. The cost of disposal is included in the wastewater treatment costs. 78 ------- TABLE IV-31 SULFUR CONTROL COSTS FOR ACID GAS EXHAUST OIL GASIFICATION ALTERNATIVE (Basis: 1000 TPD of Ammonia, 42 long ton/day Sulfur) CAPITAL COSTS. $1.000*3 $3,050 ANNUAL. OPERATING COST. $l,000's/Yr Indirect Operating Costs - Depreciation, 11 years 277 - Return on Investment (@ 202) 610 - Insurance and Taxes (@ 2%) 61 TOTAL INDIRECT COSTS $948 Direct Operating Costs - Labor Direct (@ $6.00/Hr, 1 Man/Shift) 50 Supervision (@ 15% of Labor) 7 Labor Overhead (@ 35% of Direct and Supervision) 20 Plant Overhead (@ 70% of Direct and Supervision) 39 - Maintenance (@ 5%) 153 - Utility Electric Power (@ 140 kWh/LT, $0.02/kWh) 40 Fuel (@ 0.08 106 Btu/LT, $2.00/106 Btu) 23 Cooling Water (@ 20,000 gal/LT, $0.03/103 gal) 8 - Chemicals (@ $2.50/LT in tailgas) 2 TOTAL DIRECT COSTS $342 Byproduct Sulfur Credit (@ $25/LT, 42 LT/D) (357) i TOTAL ANNUAL COST, $l,000"s/Yr $933 UNIT COST, $/ton NH3 $2,74 SOURCE: ADL Estimates 79 ------- V. IMPLICATIONS OF POTENTIAL INDUSTRY/PROCESS CHANGE Several changes in practice will occur in ammonia manufacture due to both the shortage of natural gas and environmental regulations. These changes include the addition of air preheaters to new and existing ammonia plants to decrease fuel consumption; conversion from natural gas to fuel oil in firing ammonia reformers, boilers, and dryers; the separation of hydrogen from the purge gas in the ammonia synthesis loop; and the building of new ammonia plants based on petroleum or coal both for fuel and for feed- stock. Of these, the only changes that meet the criteria of this study are the production of ammonia from coal or petroleum in new plants. Ammonia manufacturers are among the largest energy users in the country. We estimate that in 1973, ammonia plants consumed 590 billion cubic feet of natural gas, or 2.4% of total U.S. natural gas use. Ammonia forms the basis for nearly all nitrogen fertilizers and is also used along with its deriva- tives for the manufacture of other basic nitrogenous chemicals. About 20% of the ammonia production is for non-fertilizer uses. In the United States, its manufacture depends on natural gas, both as a raw material and as a fuel. The ammonia industry in the United States and worldwide has seen tremendous growth over the years. Output in 1973 was almost ten times that of 1950 for an average annual growth rate over the 23-year period of over 10% per year. This reflects almost exactly the growth rate in nitrogen fertilizers in the United States, which has had a dynamic long term growth. The shortage of natural gas has contributed to the problems of the United States ammonia industry. While the gas shortage is a nationwide phenomenon, each gas pipeline or supplier has his own unique problems, and these problems are of differing severity. A Fertilizer Institute survey indicates that only 231,000 tons of ammonia production were lost because of gas cutbacks in fiscal year 1973/74; about 1.5% of total production capability. Today, however, several ammonia plants are closed because of the inability to get natural gas, and the situation is worsening. While existing plants have been able to get gas supplies, it is difficult for a new plant to obtain gas. Unless natural gas can be made available, new plants to supply increased requirements in the future will have to use fuel oil or coal both for feedstock and for process heat. Many existing plants may have to convert their reformers to fire fuel oil. However, this latter change is a fuel switch and would not involve a change in the chemistry of the process, because gas would still be used as a feedstock. Basing new plants on liquid or solid feeds, however, implies new processes. Using fuel oil as a raw material for ammonia plants would require new technology for the United States. This technology is commonplace in other parts of the world, but not here. Similarly, the use of coal as a raw material for the manufacture 80 ------- of ammonia will require new technology. There are a few coal-based ammonia plants in the world, but in the past coal-based plants generally have not been economical. The use of fuel oil and coal for the manufacture of ammonia will require partial oxidation processes. These will require oxygen, which in turn will require large amounts of electric power. Associated with the generation of power is additional pollution. The fuels for electric power generation are significantly higher in sulfur than is natural gas, and it will be necessary to remove this sulfur. This in turn could imply increased sulfur contents of waste streams, either liquid or solid. The use of coal as a feedstock will result in increased mining, transport- ing, and handling of coal, again with associated pollution problems. About 1.3 tons of coal are required per ton of ammonia. An additional consideration in the manufacture of ammonia from coal would be the potential need to develop improved water pollution control technology if plants are to be located near western coal. Generally, they are located in arid areas where rivers and streams have less tolerance for pollutants. Thus, water pollution restrictions on ammonia plants located in the West may have to be even more severe than for those located in other parts of the country. Western coal may not be a preferable starting material for ammonia plants -because it is not near potential markets. Also, the ability of an ammonia plant to use high sulfur coal would encourage ammonia producers to use high sulfur coal because of its lower value. Nonetheless, low-sulfur western coals can be made available fairly cheaply, and they conceivably could be used as raw materials. The alternates to natural gas, if arranged in order of capital invest- ment and proven, reliable, processes, would be naphtha or LPG's, residual fuel oils, and (by most rankings, a very distant third) coal. Naphtha and LPG's do not represent a viable alternate solution because of their very limited future incremental availability and high value for alternative uses, essentially the same situation as projected for natural gas. Also, the dramatic changes in the value of convenience energy place a different emphasis on the relative value of capital investment and associated charges. For example, with natural gas at 25/106 Btu the cost of gas was 35 to 40% of the cost of ammonia. In -the same plant with gas at $2.50/10° Btu, it becomes 87% of the manufacturing cost. Thus, emphasis for low cost becomes centered on energy cost, not investment. Estimates we have made of the probable cost of feedstocks in 1980 result in the following values for the upper Midwest: $/106 Btu (HHV) Natural Gas 2.90-3.00 Heavy Fuel Oil 2.50 - 2.60 High Sulfur Coal 0.60 - 1.50 81 ------- This large difference in projected value between gas and oil, and coal, certainly justifies a careful consideration of coal as a feedstock for ammonia production. A. AMMONIA FROM COAL 1. Impact on Pollution Control The following additional emissions must be controlled when producing aamonia using coal feedstock: • Water - Coal and slag pile runoff, - Wastewater from syngas purification processes; • Air - Coal handling and grinding, Sulfur-rich stream from syngas purification; and • Solid Slag, - Sulfur, and - Wastewater treatment sludge. To control the above emissions, an additional $8.7 million is required in capital investment for a plant, equivalent to 8.6% additional investment (Table V-l). About 53% is related to control of runoff arid the remainder to control of air emissions, the most significant cost being for the removal of sulfur from syngas purification emissions. Also associated with environ- mental control for the 1,000-ton-per-day plant are annual operating costs totalling $2.9 million ($8.65 per ton of ammonia). About 59% of these costs are for control of water effluents from runoff and, to a lesser degree, the synthesis gas purification processes. The air control costs are for coal handling emissions and recovery of sulfur from the syngas purification process. The costs associated with slag disposal are factored into the water cost as runoff control, assuming onsite disposal of the slag. This can be translated to an offsite disposal by using an estimated charge of $15 per ton of slag. There will be no unique problems meeting the environmental standards which may be associated with producing ammonia from a coal feedstock. The difficulties are expected to be similar to those encountered in electric power generation and in industrial use of coal-fired boilers. In addition, because the quantities of coal required are large enough to justify location near an existing mine or the opening of a new mine, there will be the additional pollution aspects related to mining. 82 ------- TABLE V-l CAPITAL INVESTMENT SUMMARY FOR ENVIRONMENTAL CONTROL (Basis: 1000 TPD Ammonia Plant) Alternative Feedstock Oil Coal Water Pollution Control Costs, $1000's Runoff Control and Treatment 4,429 Synthesis Gas Purification 186 200 Solids Purge 350 Total 536 4,629 Air-Pollution Control Costs, ?1000's Feedstock Handling 460 Synthesis Gas Production 3,050 3,600 Total 3,050 4,060 TOTAL EMVIRDNMENTAL COSTS, $1000's 3,585 8,689 Source: ADL Estimates TABLE V-2 ANNUAL INCREMENTAL OPERATING COST SUMMARY FOR ENVIRONMENTAL CONTROL (Basis: 1000 TPD Ammonia Plant) Alternative Feedstock Oil Coal Water Pollution Control Coats. $1000's/yr Runoff Control and Treatment 1,649 Synthesis Gas Purification 87 96 Solid Purge 157 Total 244 1,745 Air Pollution Control Costs. $1000's/yr Feedstock Handling 185 Synthesis Gas Production 933 1010 Total 933 f!95 TOTAL. $1000's/yr 1"7 2,940 Unit Cost. $/ton of Ammonia 3.46 8.65 Source: ADL Estimates , 83 ------- 2. Impact on Energy In controlling the emissions from an ammonia plant based on coal, which are incremental to those for the same plant based on natural gas, 166 x 10 Btu per ton of ammonia are consumed. This amounts to approximately 56 billion Btu per year (Table V-3). This is only an increment of 0.5% over that needed for production. About 71% of the energy is in the form of electrical power (3.8 billion kWh/year). Ammonia production has a significant energy requirement. The amount required for environmental control is an incremental 0.5%. 3. Factors Affecting Probability of Change A few ammonia-from-coal plants have been built in the world, but further process improvements will be required before such plants can become viable for the United States. Significant environmental impact may be felt by the manu- facture of ammonia from coal. Such plants would probably be located near coal mines and may in fact justify the opening of new mines. Because ammonia plants based on coal can normally use high sulfur coal, it would probably be to their advantage to do so. High sulfur coal (3-5%) will have an intrinsi- cally lower value than low sulfur coal, and since it is possible to use the lower value material, ammonia producers probably would do so. This may result in the manufacture of significant quantities of byproduct sulfur but could alternatively result.in sulfur discharges in the form of a solid waste stream. The cost of manufacturing ammonia from coal would also have to be competitive. Figure V-l provides a comparison of the ammonia production costs for various coal and natural gas prices. Note that, until the price of natural gase reaches $2.50/10 Btu and coal remains at $0.95/106 Btu or less ($17.20/ ton), the new feedstock is not attractive unless there are overriding factors in a specific area — such as the unavailability of natural gas. The investment required for a coal-based plant is higher than that for one based on liquid or gaseous hydrocarbons. Nevertheless, when faced with a continuing shortage of natural gas, the industry will have to find other fuels and feedstocks. Thus, coal must be considerably cheaper on a Btu basis than competing fuels to make investment attractive. A plant constructed to handle coal can be switched to either natural gas or heavy oil essentially while on-stream, thus taking advantage of the price differentials among these fuels as they change from tinie to time. However, the penalties associated with the higher investment required for the coal-based plant will remain. 4. Areas of Research Investigations are advisable to identify the path of the metals present in coal through the gasification process to determine their presence in the solid wastes such as slag, in the air and water emissions, and in process recycle streams. 84 ------- TABLE V-3 ENERGY CONSUMPTION SUMMARY FOR ENVIRONMENTAL CONTROL Water Pollution Control Electric Power (106 kwh/yr) Fuel (106 Btu/yr) Total Fuel Equivalent 8 10,500 Btu/kWh Air Pollution Control Electric Power (106 kWh/yr) Fuel (106 Btu/yr) Total Fuel Equivalent U 10,500 Btu/kHh (10' Btu/yr) TOTAL ELECTRIC POWER (lO6 kWh/yr) TOTAL FUEL (106 Btu/yr) TOTAL FUEL EQUIVALENT » 10,500 Btu/kWh (106 Btu/yr) Source: Arthur D. Little, Inc. estimates. Alternative Feedstock Oil Coal 10,130 7,402 2.000 3.090 11,500 16,500 32,500 48,945 2.965 11,500 42,630 125,400 3.795 16,500 56,347 165,700 0.25 O.SO 0.75 1.00 1.25 1.50 1.75 2.OD 2.26 2-50 F«ditockPrl«S/106Bu Figure V-l:. Effect of Natural Gas and Coal Prices Upon Ammonia Prices 85 ------- B. AMMONIA FROM PETROLEUM 1. Impact On Pollution Control The following additional emmisions must be controlled when producing ammonia using oil feedstock: • Water Wastewater from syngas purification processes; • Air Sulfur-rich stream from syngas purification; and • Solid - Sulfur, and - Wastewater treatment sludge. To control the above emissions, an additional $3.6 million will be required in capital investment for plant, equivalent to 5.1% additional investment (Table V-l). About 85% of 'this additional investment is required for control of air emissions with the major portion required on the sulfur-rich exhaust from the syngas purification process. The annual operating costs associated with environmental control for the 1,000-ton-per-day plant are $1.2 million. About 79% of this annual cost is for control of sulfur emissions from the syngas purification process. The remainder is for treatment of wastewater streams from oil gasification and from syngas purification. These combined capital related and direct operating costs can be translated to $3.46 per ton of ammonia. No unique problems are expected in meeting the environmental standards which may be associated with producing ammonia from heavy fuel oil feedstock. The difficulties are expected to be similar to other industrial applications of residual fuel oil. 2. Impact on Energy In controlling the emissions from an ammonia plant based on oil, which are incremental to those for the same plant based on natural gas, 125 x 1CH Btu per ton of ammonia are consumed. This amounts to approximately 43 billion Btu per year (Table V-3), and about 72% of this energy is in the form of electrical power (3.0 million kWh/year). Since ammonia production has a significant energy requirement, the amount required for environmental control is only an incremental 0.2%. 3. Factors Affecting Probability of Change This technology is commonplace in countries outside the western hemisphere but no plants in the United States produce ammonia from' petroleum. New plants built to manufacture ammonia from petroleum will probably be based on the heavier petroleum fractions, because over the long term they will probably be less expensive than lighter fractibns such as LPG and naphtha. There will 86 ------- be environmental problems associated with these plants, however, tech- nology already exists to overcome many of the problems. It remains only to translate this technology to specific applications. The cost of manufacturing ammonia from petroleum would also have to be competitive. Figure V-2 provides a comparison of the ammonia production costs for various petroleum and natural gas prices. Note that, if the price of natural gas reaches $2.65/million Btu, residual fuel oil will be an attractive new feedstock if it is available for less than $2.00/million Btu. 4. Areas of Research The process is well documented. Little research is required and the companies involved are pursuing those areas. 200 -I 190- 180- 170- .a c < lee- 's I '50- S 140- 130 120- 110- 100- 90 - 80 Residual Fuel Oil Natural Gas 0.25 0.50 0.75 1.00 1.25 1.50 1.75 2.00 2.25 2.50 2.75 Feed, ck Price S/106 Btu •Figure V-2. Effect of Natural Gas and Residual Fuel Oil Prices Upon Ammonia Prices 87 ------- TECHNICAL REPORT DATA (Please read Instructions on the reverse before completing) 1. REPORT NO. HPA-6Dfl/7-76-Q34g 2. 3. RECIPIENT'S ACCESSION-NO. 4. TITLE AND SUBTITLE 5NVIRONMENTAL CONSIDERATIONS OF SELECTED ENERGY CONSERV- ING MANUFACTURING PROCESS OPTIONS. Vol. VII. Ammonia [ndustry Report S. REPORT DATE December 1976 issuing date 6. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION CODE 7. AUTHOR(S) 8. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION REPORT NO. 9. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION NAME AND ADDRESS Arthur D. Little, Inc. Acorn Park Cambridge, Massachusetts 02140 10. PROGRAM ELEMENT NO. 11. CONTRACT/GRANT NO. 68-03-2198 12. SPONSORING AGENCY NAME AND ADDRESS Industrial Environmental Research Laboratory Office of Research and Development U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Cincinnati, Ohio 45268 13. TYPE OF REPORT AND PERIOD COVERED FINAL 14. SPONSORING AGENCY CODE EPA-ORD 15. SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES Vol. IV-XV, EPA-600/7-76-034d through. EPA-600/7-76-034o, refer to studies of other industries as noted below; .Vol I, EPA-600/7-76-034a, is the Industry Summary Re-port and Vol. TT F.PA-fifln/7— 7ft— -is t-1-ig TnHiigf-T-u Pi--irvr-i t- y 16. ABSTRACT This study assesses the likelihood of new process technology and new practices being introduced by energy intensive industries and explores the environmental impacts of such changes. Specifically, Vol. VII deals with the ammonia industry and analyzes the production of ammonia based on coal gasification and the production of ammonia based on heavy oil gasification in terms of process economics and environmental/energy consequences. Vol. III-XI and Vol. XIII-XV deal with the following industries: iron and steel, petroleum refining, pulp and paper, olefins, aluminum, textiles, cement, glass, chlo'r-alkali»phosphorus and phosphoric acid, copper, and fertilizers. Vol. I presents the overall summation and identification of research needs and areas of highest overall priority. Vol. II, prepared early in the study, presents and describes the overview of the industries considered and presents the methodology used to select industries. 17. KEY WORDS AND DOCUMENT ANALYSIS DESCRIPTORS b.lDENTIFIERS/OPEN ENDED TERMS COSATI Field/Group Energy Pollution Industrial Wastes Ammonia Manufacturing Processes; Energy Conservation; Coal Gasification; Syngas 13B 18. DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT Release to public 19. SECURITY CLASS (ThisReport)' unclassified 21. NO. OF PAGES 104 20. SECURITY CLASS (This page) unclassified 22. PRICE EPA Form 2220-1 (9-73) 88 ------- |