4 surprising ways carbon capture and storage can help reduce emissions
Key takeaways:
Years ago, there was a TV commercial for a multi-purpose kitchen utensil that could do it all (slice, dice, julienne!), saving time and relieving home cooks of the need to buy a lot of different tools.
I often picture that ad when I’m describing?the benefits of carbon capture and storage (CCS) – the technology ExxonMobil’s working to expand at the U.S. Gulf Coast and elsewhere.?
That’s because carbon capture and storage is a versatile tool that can enable a range of solutions to reduce – or even remove – the CO? emissions that contribute to climate change.?
And you may be surprised to learn: not all these solutions are aimed at addressing emissions from the burning of fossil fuels.
CCS, the common denominator
What is carbon capture and storage (CCS)??It’s a technology that captures CO?, then stores it safely and permanently deep underground. It’s one of the only scalable, affordable options available today for energy-intensive industries (like steelmaking ) that rely on fossil fuels but want to reduce their post-combustion CO? emissions.?
But as they said in those TV ads – “But wait, there’s more!”?
CCS and its associated infrastructure also can:?
Those last two (direct air capture and the biofuels-CCS combo) don’t just prevent new CO? emissions from entering the atmosphere – they could remove CO? that’s already there.?That would be a real game-changer.
IEA: Net zero “impossible” without CCS?
If you don’t believe me, check out this report from the International Energy Agency (IEA), the respected intergovernmental organization based in Paris.
Achieving society’s climate goals will be “virtually impossible” without CCS, the IEA said, because “CCS is the only group of technologies that contributes both to reducing emissions in key sectors directly and to removing CO? to balance emissions that are challenging to avoid – a critical part of ‘net’ zero goals.”
ExxonMobil is a CCS leader. We’ve already agreed to store up to 5 million metric tons per year of CO? ?for industrial customers, with more to come. We’ll also use CCS in our own operations: the low-carbon hydrogen plant we’re?planning to build in Baytown, Texas, includes 7 million metric tons of per year of CCS capacity.
CCS is proven, and ready now at scale. To meet its net zero goals, the world needs to speed deployment of CCS and its related infrastructure, and enact robust policies that support it. Or, as they said in the TV ads: “Hurry! Act now!”?
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1 个月We are living in Nature. We need to adapt to Nature. Nature is our best teacher. We need to build Tao following Nature (sustainable) society. We can reach Real Zero right now. No need solar panel farm, wind farm, battery car, gasoline car, nuclear, desalination, wave energy etc. These are not clean energy technologies. We need to fucus on building sustainable community-driven solutions for future generations. We don't need innovations/wars which make human's consciousness go to heaven/hell. Clean energy production service community, circular economy, circular agriculture operation building, forest city are the foundation of sustainable community-driven solutions.? Wired internet, wired water, wired electricity, concentrated living are the key for human mental and body health.
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Principal - Artifex Engineering, Inc.
2 个月Annual CO2 emissions increased between 1940 and 2023 from approximately five (5) to thirty-eight (38) billion metric tons and is still increasing.?CCS is costly and limited. The total amount of CO2 that could be captured in 2030 is less than 0.5 billion metric tons (less than 1.5% of 2023 emissions). https://www.dhirubhai.net/posts/guy-mansour-ph-d-p-e-65512013_starting-in-the-1970s-the-plastics-industry-activity-7201624709581479936-RErs?utm_source=share&utm_medium=member_ios
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