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IEA Urges Quick, Global Push to Develop, Deploy Carbon Capture, Storage Tech

October 22, 2008 // Published as a news service by IHS

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According to the International Energy Agency (IEA), carbon dioxide capture and storage (CCS) is one of the most promising technological solutions to curb greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and to salvage the climate.

However, there are still many questions about CCS technologies according to an IEA study, Carbon Dioxide Capture and Storage: A Key Carbon Abatement Option.

Only four full-scale CCS projects exist in the world; none of these projects captures carbon dioxide (CO2) from a coal-fired power plant.

"The window of opportunity is closing for the global community to cost-effectively address climate change. CCS technologies must play a key role, but first they must be proven in the next decade," said Nobuo Tanaka, executive director of IEA.

The IEA study demonstrates that CCS can deliver cost-effective emissions reductions, but governments and industry must come forward to finance large-scale CCS demonstrations and to work together more widely.

Under current energy policies, GHG emissions are projected to grow rapidly, with a major contribution coming from fossil fuel combustion in power plants and industry.

The IEA, in its 2008 Energy Technology Perspectives (ETP) study, projects that energy-related CO2 emissions would grow by 130% until 2050 in the absence of new policies. This increase would largely be a result of increased fossil fuel usage.

The 2007 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) 4th Assessment Report indicates that such a rise in emissions could lead to a temperature increase in the range of 4-7 degree Celsius, with major impacts on the environment and human activity.

There is a large consensus that a halving of energy-related CO2 emissions is needed by 2050 to limit the expected temperature increase to less than 3 degrees. Meeting this formidable challenge will take an energy technology revolution, said IEA. The massive changes will involve enhanced energy efficiency, increased renewable energies and nuclear power and the decarbonization of power generation from fossil fuels.

According to IEA, in the power and industrial sectors alone, CCS could contribute nearly one-fifth of the reductions needed to halve back GHG emissions by 2050 and this at reasonable cost. "Most of the major world economies recognize this and have CCS technology development programs designed to achieve commercial deployment," said Tanaka.

At the 2008 Hokkaido-Toyako summit, the Group of Eight (G8) countries announced that 20 large-scale CCS demonstration projects must be committed by 2010, with a view to broad commercial deployment in 2020. Ministers asked the IEA to assess how much progress will have been made in terms of implementation by that time.

Carbon Dioxide Capture and Storage: A Key Carbon Abatement Option finds that current CCS spending and activity levels are nowhere near enough to achieve the G8 goals. CCS technology demonstration has been challenged by a global increase in costs and a lack of suitable financial mechanisms to support it.

The IEA believes that up to USD 20B is needed for near-term demonstrations, in addition to the plants base costs. It is also important to integrate CCS into GHG regulatory and incentive schemes.

While progress is underway in some countries, no country has developed the comprehensive, detailed legal and regulatory framework that is necessary to govern effectively the use of CCS. CCS is poorly understood by the general public with the result that there is a wide-spread lack of public support for this technology as compared to several other GHG mitigation options, said IEA.

Next to an updated analysis on the potential, cost and performance of CCS technologies, the study discusses the financial incentive mechanisms that governments can use, and proposes a CCS roadmap with the necessary technical, political, financial and international collaboration activities to achieve their emissions reduction goals.

Source: International Energy Agency (IEA).


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