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Report
Storing CO2 for the sake of the climate
DW (English)
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9/19/2024
The climate clock is ticking, and countries are looking to cut carbon emissions. Norway and the US are storing CO2 underground. It’s an expensive technology, and not without risk. Will Germany also get on board?
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00:00
Why are Norway and the U.S. ahead of Germany on carbon capture and storage?
00:06
And what is it exactly?
00:08
Both countries benefit from the technical know-how of their oil and gas industries,
00:13
and they're heavily investing in CCS technology.
00:17
The Norwegian government has supported our part of the project with 80% funding.
00:26
In Breivik, Norway, Heidelberg Materials began revamping a cement factory last year.
00:31
They're installing a carbon capture plant without disrupting daily operations.
00:36
The German company wants to launch the first net-zero cement produced using carbon capture and storage.
00:42
Here's how it works.
00:44
An industrial facility like the one in Breivik separates and captures the CO2 from its smokestack emissions.
00:51
The CO2 is liquefied and shipped to a storage location.
00:55
Then it's injected through a pipeline up to three kilometers under the seabed into deep sandstone formations.
01:02
The CO2 can also be stored on land and transported by truck, rail or pipelines.
01:09
So why is it so hard to produce cement without carbon emissions?
01:16
Flinker is the main ingredient of cement.
01:21
And in that kiln process, there's a lot of CO2 coming out of the limestone.
01:28
This is Jan Teulen. He's a 30-year veteran of the cement industry.
01:33
We try, of course, to reduce the amount of clinker in cement.
01:38
That's an ever-decreasing factor.
01:41
But there is a limit, because at a certain moment, your cement will not perform anymore.
01:47
You will not have concrete which has the performance that it needs.
01:52
So there are technical limits.
01:55
CCS technology is intended for use in hard-to-abate sectors like steel, chemicals and the cement industry.
02:03
Industries that can't completely eliminate carbon emissions.
02:07
But why is a German company coming all the way to Norway for this?
02:11
It's fairly simple.
02:13
CCS technology is banned in Germany.
02:16
Economics minister Robert Habeck wants to change that.
02:19
He also paid a visit to Breivik.
02:21
Early adopter Norway introduced CCS in 1996.
02:25
Now they're investing 1.5 billion euros in the longship project,
02:29
which aims to show how vast amounts of captured carbon can be safely transported
02:34
and locked away under the seabed, at a profit.
02:38
I think this really is a shift in the debate,
02:42
that they are interested in CO2 to make money off their storage capacity.
02:49
This is Felix Schenewald. He studies European climate policy.
02:54
So they are really asking for EU member states,
02:58
do you want to export your CO2?
03:00
We have the capacity here, we have the technology.
03:04
Northern Lights is part of the longship project.
03:07
Owned by Shell, Total Energies and Equinor,
03:11
its new CO2 storage facility is due to go online in 2024.
03:16
The companies have partnered with the Norwegian government.
03:19
They'll receive subsidies in the development phase
03:22
and in the first 10 years of operation.
03:24
The goal? Job creation.
03:26
And lucrative business in carbon transport and storage.
03:30
Industrial partner Heidelberg Materials is also profiting from the new technology
03:35
and the generous subsidies that will help revamp its facility.
03:39
The Norwegian government has supported our part of the project with 80% funding.
03:48
The whole investment is a few hundred million.
03:52
But Breivik is just one of about 140 facilities operated by Heidelberg Materials,
03:58
one of the world's largest concrete manufacturers.
04:01
They're planning to invest some 1.5 billion euros by 2030, including in the US.
04:07
That's also because President Joe Biden's Inflation Reduction Act
04:11
offers financial incentives to companies that invest in carbon capture and storage.
04:17
In 2023, the largest number of CCS facilities were under construction in the US,
04:23
followed by Canada, the UK, China and Norway.
04:27
And this map depicts the commercial ventures that are already in operation.
04:32
But why is the US so advanced when it comes to carbon capture and storage?
04:36
It is also important that they don't really have this discussion about how to evade emissions,
04:42
at least not the way we have it in Germany.
04:45
So in the US, you could also capture fossil CO2 and store it underground.
04:51
To find out more, let's take a look at what's called Enhanced Oil Recovery,
04:56
a technology that's been employed mainly in North America for more than 50 years.
05:02
High-pressure CO2 is injected into an oil field, raising the pressure underground.
05:08
The crude oil becomes more viscous and can be pumped to the surface more easily.
05:14
But what are the risks?
05:17
Scientists say that some 150 billion tons of CO2 could be stored under the North Sea,
05:24
a region that includes a number of marine protection zones.
05:28
But what if there's a leak?
05:30
Leakage is possible.
05:32
And the biggest problem are probably the old wells.
05:36
So if you want to look at the North Sea as an example,
05:40
we have there something like 17,000 wells that have been drilled in the past,
05:46
over the last decades, mostly to look for oil and gas.
05:50
And it's often unclear what were these old wells, these abandoned wells.
05:55
But maybe a pathway for CO2 leakage, that's something that needs to be considered.
06:01
Let's recap.
06:03
Countries like Norway have been on board with CCS for quite a while.
06:07
They have a big technological edge and are subsidizing CCS on a grand scale.
06:12
That's also true in the US under Biden.
06:15
Norway and the US also benefit from the know-how of their oil and gas industries.
06:21
Germany still has to legalize CCS and might export CO2 to Norway.
06:27
One thing's for sure, the technology is expensive and it's not without risk.
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