Carbon capture and storage: UK's fourth energy pillar, or broken bridge?
dc.contributor.author
Haszeldine, R Stuart
en
dc.date.accessioned
2016-03-08T09:43:30Z
dc.date.available
2016-03-08T09:43:30Z
dc.date.issued
2009-09-08
dc.description
CCS power is the only way to burn fossil fuel with lower emissions, and will be essential to fill in electricity generation gaps on weeks when wind does not blow across the EU. CCS is part of the UK plan for a low carbon future, but is progressing too slowly, to be commercially proven when needed. The UK is uniquely advantaged to exploit CCS, with interest from power, transport, and storage companies. Our group has made a comprehensive first evaluation of offshore UK storage, showing that 100 years of not just UK, but also European CO2, could be stored profitably. If this business charged pore space fees, that could be a revenue of £5Bn per year just from storage. Pilot injection could start immediately, and is a needed to solve longer-term capacity uncertainties.
en
dc.description.abstract
Mike Stephenson (BGS) and Stuart Haszeldine (University of Edinburgh) were speaking at the "Carbon capture and storage in the north sea: a national asset in a low carbon future" session at the 2009 British Science Festival in Guildford.
Talk short summary: CCS power is the only way to burn fossil fuel with lower emissions, and will be essential to fill in electricity generation gaps on weeks when wind does not blow across the EU. CCS is part of the UK plan for a low carbon future, but is progressing too slowly, to be commercially proven when needed. The UK is uniquely advantaged to exploit CCS, with interest from power, transport, and storage companies. Our group has made a comprehensive first evaluation of offshore UK storage, showing that 100 years of not just UK, but also European CO2, could be stored profitably. If this business charged pore space fees, that could be a revenue of £5Bn per year just from storage. Pilot injection could start immediately, and is a needed to solve longer-term capacity uncertainties.
en
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/15678
dc.identifier.uri
https://doi.org/10.7488/WP-SCCS-2009-03
en
dc.language.iso
en
dc.publisher
Scottish Carbon Capture and Storage (SCCS)
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dc.relation.ispartofseries
WP SCCS 2009-03
en
dc.subject
Carbon Capture and Storage
en
dc.subject
climate change mitigation
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dc.subject
fossil fuel
en
dc.title
Carbon capture and storage: UK's fourth energy pillar, or broken bridge?
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dc.type
Working Paper
en
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