7 research outputs found

    The Role of UNFCCC Mechanisms in Demonstration and Deployment of CCS Technologies

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    AbstractThe United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change can provide an important source of financing and technological learning to support uptake of carbon dioxide (CO2) capture and geological storage (CCS) in developing countries. In this context, a review of the current and future mechanisms for such support is outlined. Two important applications of CCS are considered further: CCS with CO2 enhanced oil recovery (CO2-EOR) and CCS on bioenergy emission sources (BECCS). Both technologies may be key to supporting near-term deployment of CCS in developing countries because of certain advantages they hold over other CCS applications

    Financing early opportunity CCS projects in emerging economies through the carbon market: Mitigation potential and costs

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    AbstractThe Kyoto Protocol’s flexible mechanisms allow projects that reduce greenhouse gas emissions to generate ‘carbon credits’. The most well known of the schemes is the clean development mechanism (CDM), which applies to emission reduction projects in developing and emerging economy countries that have ratified the Kyoto Protocol. The eligibility of carbon dioxide (CO2) capture and storage (CCS) technologies within the CDM has been a protracted process. One of the concerns hampering progress relates to the possible market implications of inclusion because of the potentially very large number of certified emission reduction units (CERs) that could be generated from CCS projects, which could potentially destabilize the global carbon market, for example, by depressing global carbon prices due to over-supply relative to demand. Drawing on these concerns, this paper provides a summary of analysis undertaken to assess the potential scale of such effects in both 2012 (the end of first commitment period of the Kyoto Protocol to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change) and in 2020, with a view to evaluating the legitimacy of concerns in the short- to medium-term. It also provides some views on the potential alternative mechanisms that could evolve post-2012 for incentivizing and financing investments made in CCS technologies in developing and emerging economies

    Development of a Global CO2 Pipeline Infrastructure : Report 2010/13

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    Projections of the scale on which CCS needs to be deployed to meet targets for CO2 emissions reductions indicate that a massive CO2 pipeline infrastructure will be required. To date CCS systems have tended to be based on dedicated pipelines connecting source to sink although some studies of regional CO2 pipeline infrastructure requirements have been carried out. The purpose of this study is to examine the wider issues including design, financing, economics and regional differences

    Biotechnology for carbon capture and fixation: Critical review and future directions

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