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Lars Strömberg

Researcher at Chalmers University of Technology

Publications -  11
Citations -  538

Lars Strömberg is an academic researcher from Chalmers University of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Electricity generation & Emissions trading. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 10 publications receiving 503 citations. Previous affiliations of Lars Strömberg include Vattenfall.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Transportation systems for CO2––application to carbon capture and storage

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors identify and analyze different transportation scenarios with respect to costs, capacity, distance, means of transportation and type of storage, and show that feasible transportation alternatives are pipelines (on and off shore), water carriers (off shore), and combinations of these.
Book ChapterDOI

Oxyfuel combustion for coal-fired power generation with CO2 capture—Opportunities and challenges

TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss oxyfuel recycle combustion is a highly interesting option for lignite-based power generation with CO2 capture, due to the possibility to use advanced steam technology, reduce the boiler size and cost and to design a zero-emission power plant.
Journal ArticleDOI

Update on Vattenfall’s 30 MWth oxyfuel pilot plant in Schwarze Pumpe

TL;DR: Vattenfall is presently taking an experimental large-scale pilot test facility into operation for the detailed investigation of the oxyfuel firing process as discussed by the authors, which is located southeast of Berlin in Germany in the vicinity of the existing lignite-fired power plant Schwarze Pumpe.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

On the functional relation between security and dependability impairments

TL;DR: The overall objective is to arrive at a general and clear-cut framework that would describe how trustable (dependable, secure) a system is, regardless of the reason for its not being totally trustable.
Journal ArticleDOI

A utility-eye view of the CO2 compliance-decision process in the European power-sector

TL;DR: In this paper, a utility eye-view of the European power sector's CO2-compliance decision process under a tradable emissions scheme is provided, which indicates that, in the medium term, many utilities are likely to consider options based on traditional power technologies such as converting existing coal-fired capacity to burn gas, extending the lives of nuclear capacity, and replacing old coalfired plants with more efficient gas- or even coalfired units.