Regarding the second question, significant investment would be required in carbon capture and purification technologies to prevent emissions from coal power plants from entering the atmosphere. While advanced coal technologies have managed to reduce emissions-sulfur dioxide by 68% and nitrogen oxide by 46% over the past 30 years-the reduction in CO2 emissions has been much smaller. Additionally, coal mining itself is a major source of pollution and environmental degradation. Given that renewable technologies produce zero carbon or harmful gas emissions once built, and that natural gas and nuclear energy, though harmful during extraction, have relatively limited and manageable environmental impacts during operation, focusing on "clean coal" may not be the most economical path forward. That said, carbon capture technologies could play a crucial role in reversing climate change and are, in my view, well worth the investment.
@@arthouston7361 please educate yourself, and use reliable scientific sources, you can check reliability and quality of a journal, another good thing to look at would be conflict of interest disclaimers at the end of scientific papers. Co2 is a greenhouse gas, excess amounts in the atmosphere cause heat to be trapped, resulting in global warming, Ice caps to melt and oceans to warm, causing sea levels to rise. Extreme weather events such as heatwaves, heavy downpours and wildfires. Changes to where different wildlife populations can live and survive. Disrupted access to food. these are scientifically proven and we can see them happening at an alarming increasing rate each year.
Several principal emissions result from burning coal : Sulfur dioxide, which contributes to acid rain and respiratory illnesses. Nitrogen oxides, which contribute to smog and respiratory illnesses. Particulates, which contribute to smog, haze, respiratory illnesses, and lung disease. other pollutants include benzene, carbon monoxide, formaldehyde, and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. furthermore, coal has lower energy density and higher carbon concentration than methane or natural gas, for instance, causing more Co2 to be released into air for the same amount of power generation.
Thanks for sharing your feedback @GounaAbed. In the next video on boilers, we’ll definitely cover the control system. Stay tuned as we break down how process control works in boilers.
Zeinab has a strong background in industrial automation and is a valued member of the RealPars team, working in the tech department. She's been contributing to our content and projects with her expertise. Happy learning!
it's so interesting to know how industrial equipment work, more of this kind, please
Thanks so much! 😊 We're glad you find it interesting!
Zeinab is an awesome instructor. I love how she interprets a complicated process. Thanks a lot
I'm telling you as a tech enthusiast, your contents are awsume ❤
Thanks @ANouri-td7nj, Your support means a lot to us, especially from a fellow tech enthusiast! ❤
100% Great 🎉 Waiting for next super heater vd.🙏
Thank you so much! 🙌 We're glad you enjoyed it! Stay tuned.
@RP - 👍👍 Excellent. What makes a coal-fired power plant so "dirty", and can diesel/coal ever be "clean"?
Regarding the second question, significant investment would be required in carbon capture and purification technologies to prevent emissions from coal power plants from entering the atmosphere.
While advanced coal technologies have managed to reduce emissions-sulfur dioxide by 68% and nitrogen oxide by 46% over the past 30 years-the reduction in CO2 emissions has been much smaller. Additionally, coal mining itself is a major source of pollution and environmental degradation.
Given that renewable technologies produce zero carbon or harmful gas emissions once built, and that natural gas and nuclear energy, though harmful during extraction, have relatively limited and manageable environmental impacts during operation, focusing on "clean coal" may not be the most economical path forward.
That said, carbon capture technologies could play a crucial role in reversing climate change and are, in my view, well worth the investment.
@@arashmoradian1988 This assumes that there is an issue with CO2 emissions, which is not a fact. It's a hypothesis.
@@arthouston7361 please educate yourself, and use reliable scientific sources, you can check reliability and quality of a journal, another good thing to look at would be conflict of interest disclaimers at the end of scientific papers.
Co2 is a greenhouse gas, excess amounts in the atmosphere cause heat to be trapped, resulting in global warming, Ice caps to melt and oceans to warm, causing sea levels to rise. Extreme weather events such as heatwaves, heavy downpours and wildfires. Changes to where different wildlife populations can live and survive. Disrupted access to food.
these are scientifically proven and we can see them happening at an alarming increasing rate each year.
Several principal emissions result from burning coal : Sulfur dioxide, which contributes to acid rain and respiratory illnesses. Nitrogen oxides, which contribute to smog and respiratory illnesses. Particulates, which contribute to smog, haze, respiratory illnesses, and lung disease. other pollutants include benzene, carbon monoxide, formaldehyde, and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons.
furthermore, coal has lower energy density and higher carbon concentration than methane or natural gas, for instance, causing more Co2 to be released into air for the same amount of power generation.
I answered the first question, but my comment got deleted, don't know why
please explain us process control boiler
Thanks for sharing your feedback @GounaAbed. In the next video on boilers, we’ll definitely cover the control system. Stay tuned as we break down how process control works in boilers.
@@realparsthank you very much ❤❤❤❤❤❤
Great
Glad you like it!
Very nice and informative video
Glad you liked it✨
Who is this Zineb ?
Zeinab has a strong background in industrial automation and is a valued member of the RealPars team, working in the tech department. She's been contributing to our content and projects with her expertise.
Happy learning!
@@realpars got it thanks I have mixed her up with someone I know lol .