Weekend read: Solar needs aluminium, but it has a carbon problem

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The energy transition, the World Bank says, will require more aluminium than any other metal. In order to keep temperatures below a two-degree increase, clean energy technologies will need almost six million tons of the metal each year by 2050. By comparison, the combined total of lithium, cobalt and nickel, the mineral poster children of the energy transition for their use in batteries, is not expected to pass four million tons. These estimates rely heavily on myriad assumptions, but they underline the importance that metals have along the path to zero-emission energy.

Almost all this aluminium for clean energy will be used in solar module frames. Its resistance to corrosion and light weight make it an optimal choice for exposure to the elements and ensuring modules structural stability.

Aluminium’s energy challenge

Aluminium may be needed for the climate, but the industry’s main environmental challenge is its own climate impact, according to engineering professor Guðrún Sævarsdóttir at the University of Reykjavik. Production is reaching ever higher volumes, but so are the industry’s carbon emissions.

“There has been a large increase in the production volume of aluminium [over the past two decades], it has more than doubled since the year 2000,” says Sævarsdóttir. “And a lot of that development has been based on coal power, unfortunately.”

New Chinese aluminium smelters have driven the spike in production, and they now produce more than half the world’s new aluminium. While the country relies on coal for 70% of its power, the power mix of aluminium smelters is more than 90% coal, according to Sævarsdóttir’s research.

Mining, refining and smelting new aluminium produces nearly 2% of the world’s total carbon emissions. Every ton of aluminium produces on average roughly 15 tons of CO2 equivalents. That’s almost four tons higher than 20 years ago. By some measures the jump in aluminium production may mean 400 million more tons of CO2 equivalents each year by 2040.

A number of aluminium companies are developing new smelting processes and building new types of plants to reduce the industry’s footprint on the planet, but scientists have said more development is needed to align its GHG emissions with its renewable energy product.

“We’re at a critical juncture at the moment,” says Cameron Jones, director of assurance with the Aluminum Stewardship Initiative. The ASI, a nonprofit industry certification group, is conducting “healthy and rigorous” discussions to update its standard that encourages companies to target 8 tons of C02 equivalents by 2030. It plans to create a more “inclusive and challenging” target, but there are technological and policy barriers to overcome.

The process problem

New aluminium typically begins as bauxite ore, which is sent to refineries that extract alumina, or aluminium oxide. Separating aluminium from alumina requires temperatures approaching 1000ºC, and the sending of a powerful electric current through the molten mineral.

The process is not only energy intensive, but the mineral’s oxygen combines with carbon anodes to emit CO2. The direct carbon emissions make up roughly 10% of the process’s total emissions, and electricity consumption contributes 71%, according to Sævarsdóttir’s work.

“We’re not going to get rid of these emissions unless something is done about the process,” says Sævarsdóttir.

Recycling dramatically reduces the energy required to feed the metal into circulation, and aluminium is in theory infinitely recyclable. The Aluminum Association, an industry representative body, estimates that 75% of all aluminium ever produced is still in circulation. Mining companies are inching toward investing in recycling plants, such as Rio Tinto’s Canadian plant announced in September.

In the World Bank’s two-degree scenario, the proportion of recycled aluminium will grow, but it will still only cover 61% of demand. The ASI expects to release proposed standards to address climate impacts in the next several months for consultation, but establishing a path for carbon reduction may take much longer.

“It’s such a complex, diverse supply chain that we can’t do a one-size-fits-all,” says Jones. “It’s very difficult to come up with a single pathway or methodology that’s going to work across the whole sector. So, this is the real issue at the moment.”

Search for solutions

Firms in aluminium production have chosen several routes to reduce their carbon footprint. Aluminium smelters that use renewable energy have mostly connected to hydro power, such as in Norway and Iceland, but hydro capacity is limited and depends heavily on geography. The proportion of smelters that use hydropower has decreased from 46% in 2000 to 26% in 2018, while coal now powers 61% of aluminium production.

Smelting often requires an order of magnitude more energy than other steps. To ensure they are supplied by renewable energy, some smelters in China are discussing whether to transport entire operations to areas where the grid relies on renewables, Jones says, but none have moved yet.

Smelters are designed for constant power, but German firm Trimet has transformed some of its furnaces in an aluminium smelter to adapt to variable power. While smelters need to keep materials in a molten state, engineers add flexibility that allows the smelter to work with 25% less or 25% more power than typically used. When there is excess electricity available on local grids, sometimes a result of surplus solar and wind generation, process controls ensure that electrolysis chambers only freeze on the edges, allowing smelting to continue, albeit at lower capacity. In a sense, such a smelter acts as a form of battery on the grid.

“It can really be a significant contribution to stabilising the grid, so we should not ignore that opportunity,” says Sævarsdóttir.

Reducing emissions

In the last few years, two ventures have claimed to replace a smelter’s direct carbon emissions with oxygen. Arctus Metals in Iceland has begun trialingsmelting processes which use inert anodes that will not react with the oxygen in alumina to produce carbon dioxide. Sævarsdóttir, who is involved in the project, is also researching the possibility of using carbon capture for direct emissions.

Rio Tinto and Alcoa have partnered to create a carbon-free smelting process – via joint venture subsidiary Elysis – founded in 2018. Consumer product companies like Apple have made deals to buy from Elysis to reduce its carbon footprint. The company, based in Canada, declined to comment for this piece and has spoken to few reporters since its launch.

Alumina refiners are accustomed to frequent technical problems and interruptions in supply, which may make them more adaptable to dependence on intermittent solar or wind energy, says Jones. Alcoa announced in September a brand of alumina produced with half the carbon emissions as the industry average.

In Australia’s Northern Territory, indigenous-owned bauxite miner Gulkula relies on a combination of solar PV and battery storage for its operations. A Rio Tinto mine in Queensland relies partially on solar power, a move that is a part of a larger resource-industry trend towards the adoption of on-site PV.

“The industry is moving the right way, but there haven’t been any ‘oh wow’ moments at this stage,” says Jones.

This past summer, Sævarsdóttir presented her research on aluminium’s carbon emissions problem to new engineering students. Her goal was to entice new recruits into solving industry’s biggest greenhouse gas problems, like the direct emissions from aluminium smelting. While electricity is responsible for a quarter of the world’s emissions, industry is close behind at 21%, according the IPCC.

“Someone needs to work on the 21%. Everyone wants to work on renewable energy, but someone needs to work on this, otherwise we will not reach carbon neutrality… I think this is the biggest opportunity to help the climate.”

Author: Ian Morse

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