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Mountaineer’s carbon capture process illustrated

Now that American Electric Power’s carbon capture and storage project has begun operating at its Mountaineer plant in New Haven, W.Va., it has received a flurry of media attention.

And rightfully so – with the help of technology developed by French energy company Alstom, SA, the Mountaineer plant has become the nation’s first coal-generated power plant to capture and store its own carbon dioxide emissions. The goal is to capture and store about 1.5 percent of the CO2 the plant produces.

In the days after the plant’s announcement, many news organizations and publications have tried to explain Mountaineer’s clean coal process to the public – but few appear to have done it better than Scientific American.

We absolutely love the interactive slideshow that award-winning environmental journalist David Biello put together for the magazine.

At first glance, his photos look like a jumble of tubes, pipes and smokestacks, but he explains how each part of the plant plays an important role in cooling, capturing, storing and regenerating the carbon dioxide.

By the end of it, we guarantee that you’ll be up-to-date with the Mountaineer project and the process of capturing carbon emissions.

If you like what you see, check out the clean coal photos that the America’s PowerSM team took during this year’s Factuality Tour on Flickr. We got to see carbon capture and sequestration in action at the Pleasant Prairie Power Plant and the Research Experience in Carbon Sequestration.

And don’t forget to read Scientific American’s related article and guide to carbon capture technology.

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Steve Gates: ACCCE National Communications Director

Steve Gates: ACCCE National Communications Director

Steve Gates, ACCCE’s national communications director, is a native of Southwestern Pennsylvania and is married to a coal miner’s daughter, which gives him a unique perspective on coal’s importance in generating electricity. Not content to rest on those laurels alone for “Behind the Plug,” Steve has more than 15 years of public and media relations experience in a variety of settings including Capitol Hill, international trade associations, the Fortune 200 and federal government outreach programs.


Tucked away in a tiny box in Steve’s attic are a B.S. degree in political science from Saint Vincent College, Latrobe, Pa. and an M.A. degree in public communications from The American University, Washington DC.

Joe Lucas: ACCCE Senior Vice President, Communications

Joe Lucas

Joe Lucas helped form Americans for Balanced Energy Choices in 1999 and is Senior Vice President, Communications for the American Coalition for Clean Coal Electricity. He has spent his entire professional career shaping energy and environmental policies at the state and federal levels.