Gundih CCS Pilot Project: Current Status of the First Carbon Capture and Storage Project in South and Southeast Asia Regions

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohammad Rachmat Sule ◽  
Wawan Gunawan A. Kadir ◽  
Toshifumi Matsuoka ◽  
Harris Prabowo ◽  
Gusti Suarnaya Sidemen
Author(s):  
Yingchao Hu ◽  
Ruicheng Fu ◽  
Wenqiang Liu ◽  
Dingding Yao ◽  
Shuiping Yan

Carbon capture and storage (CCS) technology has been broadly recognized as having the potentials to play a key role in mitigating the climate changes induced by enormous emissions of greenhouse...


2012 ◽  
Vol 23 (2-3) ◽  
pp. 395-404
Author(s):  
Catherine T. Morgan

A small-scale educational outreach pilot project was undertaken in Scottish Schools in 2010. The project aimed to share contemporary, cutting edge science and technological developments in the field of Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) with communities in the vicinity of Longannet Power Station (a potential CCS demonstration site), in Fife, Scotland. An education team from The Scottish Earth Science Education Forum delivered teacher professional development workshops and school lessons in local primary and secondary schools. Results from research conducted with participants suggest that the impacts on both the teacher and pupil sample group were significant, positively impacting perceptions about science, careers, and the technology itself.


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (15) ◽  
pp. 5922 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lena Mikhelkis ◽  
Venkatesh Govindarajan

Sweden aspires to become totally carbon dioxide-neutral by 2045. Indisputably, what is needed is not just a reduction in the emissions of CO2 (greenhouse gases in general) from the technosphere, but also a manipulated diversion of CO2 from the atmosphere to ‘traps’ in the lithosphere, technosphere, hydrosphere, and biosphere. The case study in this paper focused on Stockholm Exergi’s proposed waste-to-energy incineration plant in Lövsta, which is keen on incorporating carbon capture and storage (CCS), but is also interested in understanding the potential of carbon capture, utilization, and storage (CCU/S) in helping it to achieve ‘carbon-dioxide-negativity’. Waste-to-energy incineration plants (in cases where the petro-plastics in the waste mix can be substantially reduced) are a key component of a circular bio-economy, though the circularity here pertains to recovering energy from materials which may or may not be recyclable. CCS (storage in the North Sea) was compared with CCU/S (CO2 sintered into high-quality building blocks made of recycled slag from the steel sector) from techno-economic and environmental perspectives. The comparative analysis shows, inter alia, that a hybridized approach—a combination of CCS and CCU/S—is worth investing in. CCU/S, at the time of writing, is simply a pilot project in Belgium, a possible creatively-destructive technology which may or may not usurp prominence from CCS. The authors believe that political will and support with incentives, subsidies, and tax rebates are indispensable to motivate investments in such ground-breaking technologies and moving away from the easier route of paying carbon taxes or purchasing emission rights.


2016 ◽  
Vol 725 ◽  
pp. 012010 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nik Hisyamudin Muhd Nor ◽  
Siti Norhana Selamat ◽  
Muhammad Hanif Abd Rashid ◽  
Mohd Fauzi Ahmad ◽  
Saifulnizan Jamian ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 3 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eve Tamme ◽  
Larissa Lee Beck

Over the past two years, the European Union, Norway, Iceland, and the UK have increased climate ambition and aggressively pushed forward an agenda to pursue climate neutrality or net-zero emissions by mid-century. This increased ambition, partly the result of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's landmark findings on limiting global warming to 1.5°C, has also led to a renewed approach to and revitalized debate about the role of carbon capture and storage and carbon dioxide removal. With increasing climate ambition, including a mid-century climate neutrality goal for the whole European Union, the potential role of technological carbon dioxide removal (CDR) is emerging as one of the critical points of debate among NGOs, policymakers, and the private sector. Policymakers are starting to discuss how to incentivize a CDR scale-up. What encompasses the current debate, and how does it relate to CDR technologies' expected role in reaching climate neutrality? This perspective will highlight that policy must fill two gaps: the accounting and the commercialization gap for the near-term development of a comprehensive CDR policy framework. It will shine a light on the current status of negative emission technologies and the role of carbon capture and storage in delivering negative emissions in Europe's decarbonized future. It will also analyze the role of carbon markets, including voluntary markets, as potential incentives while exploring policy pathways for a near-term scale-up.


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