An Assessment of the Commercial Availability of Carbon Dioxide Capture and Storage Technologies as of June 2009

Currently, there is considerable confusion within parts of the carbon dioxide capture and storage (CCS) technical and regulatory communities regarding the maturity and commercial readiness of the technologies needed to capture, transport, inject, monitor and verify the efficacy of carbon dioxide (CO...

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Main Authors: Dooley, James J., Davidson, Casie L., Dahowski, Robert T.
Language:unknown
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.osti.gov/servlets/purl/967229
https://www.osti.gov/biblio/967229
https://doi.org/10.2172/967229
id ftosti:oai:osti.gov:967229
record_format openpolar
spelling ftosti:oai:osti.gov:967229 2023-07-30T04:06:49+02:00 An Assessment of the Commercial Availability of Carbon Dioxide Capture and Storage Technologies as of June 2009 Dooley, James J. Davidson, Casie L. Dahowski, Robert T. 2014-10-10 application/pdf http://www.osti.gov/servlets/purl/967229 https://www.osti.gov/biblio/967229 https://doi.org/10.2172/967229 unknown http://www.osti.gov/servlets/purl/967229 https://www.osti.gov/biblio/967229 https://doi.org/10.2172/967229 doi:10.2172/967229 01 COAL LIGNITE AND PEAT 03 NATURAL GAS CARBON DIOXIDE CLIMATES COAL COMMUNITIES GASIFICATION GEOLOGIC FORMATIONS GEOLOGIC STRUCTURES GREENHOUSE GASES MANAGEMENT MONITORING MONITORS NATURAL GAS PIPELINES STORAGE TRANSPORT VERIFICATION 2014 ftosti https://doi.org/10.2172/967229 2023-07-11T08:47:50Z Currently, there is considerable confusion within parts of the carbon dioxide capture and storage (CCS) technical and regulatory communities regarding the maturity and commercial readiness of the technologies needed to capture, transport, inject, monitor and verify the efficacy of carbon dioxide (CO2) storage in deep, geologic formations. The purpose of this technical report is to address this confusion by discussing the state of CCS technological readiness in terms of existing commercial deployments of CO2 capture systems, CO2 transportation pipelines, CO2 injection systems and measurement, monitoring and verification (MMV) systems for CO2 injected into deep geologic structures. To date, CO2 has been captured from both natural gas and coal fired commercial power generating facilities, gasification facilities and other industrial processes. Transportation via pipelines and injection of CO2 into the deep subsurface are well established commercial practices with more than 35 years of industrial experience. There are also a wide variety of MMV technologies that have been employed to understand the fate of CO2 injected into the deep subsurface. The four existing end-to-end commercial CCS projects – Sleipner, Snøhvit, In Salah and Weyburn – are using a broad range of these technologies, and prove that, at a high level, geologic CO2 storage technologies are mature and capable of deploying at commercial scales. Whether wide scale deployment of CCS is currently or will soon be a cost-effective means of reducing greenhouse gas emissions is largely a function of climate policies which have yet to be enacted and the public’s willingness to incur costs to avoid dangerous anthropogenic interference with the Earth’s climate. There are significant benefits to be had by continuing to improve through research, development, and demonstration suite of existing CCS technologies. Nonetheless, it is clear that most of the core technologies required to address capture, transport, injection, monitoring, management and verification for ... Other/Unknown Material Snøhvit SciTec Connect (Office of Scientific and Technical Information - OSTI, U.S. Department of Energy) Sleipner ENVELOPE(-41.417,-41.417,63.883,63.883)
institution Open Polar
collection SciTec Connect (Office of Scientific and Technical Information - OSTI, U.S. Department of Energy)
op_collection_id ftosti
language unknown
topic 01 COAL
LIGNITE
AND PEAT
03 NATURAL GAS
CARBON DIOXIDE
CLIMATES
COAL
COMMUNITIES
GASIFICATION
GEOLOGIC FORMATIONS
GEOLOGIC STRUCTURES
GREENHOUSE GASES
MANAGEMENT
MONITORING
MONITORS
NATURAL GAS
PIPELINES
STORAGE
TRANSPORT
VERIFICATION
spellingShingle 01 COAL
LIGNITE
AND PEAT
03 NATURAL GAS
CARBON DIOXIDE
CLIMATES
COAL
COMMUNITIES
GASIFICATION
GEOLOGIC FORMATIONS
GEOLOGIC STRUCTURES
GREENHOUSE GASES
MANAGEMENT
MONITORING
MONITORS
NATURAL GAS
PIPELINES
STORAGE
TRANSPORT
VERIFICATION
Dooley, James J.
Davidson, Casie L.
Dahowski, Robert T.
An Assessment of the Commercial Availability of Carbon Dioxide Capture and Storage Technologies as of June 2009
topic_facet 01 COAL
LIGNITE
AND PEAT
03 NATURAL GAS
CARBON DIOXIDE
CLIMATES
COAL
COMMUNITIES
GASIFICATION
GEOLOGIC FORMATIONS
GEOLOGIC STRUCTURES
GREENHOUSE GASES
MANAGEMENT
MONITORING
MONITORS
NATURAL GAS
PIPELINES
STORAGE
TRANSPORT
VERIFICATION
description Currently, there is considerable confusion within parts of the carbon dioxide capture and storage (CCS) technical and regulatory communities regarding the maturity and commercial readiness of the technologies needed to capture, transport, inject, monitor and verify the efficacy of carbon dioxide (CO2) storage in deep, geologic formations. The purpose of this technical report is to address this confusion by discussing the state of CCS technological readiness in terms of existing commercial deployments of CO2 capture systems, CO2 transportation pipelines, CO2 injection systems and measurement, monitoring and verification (MMV) systems for CO2 injected into deep geologic structures. To date, CO2 has been captured from both natural gas and coal fired commercial power generating facilities, gasification facilities and other industrial processes. Transportation via pipelines and injection of CO2 into the deep subsurface are well established commercial practices with more than 35 years of industrial experience. There are also a wide variety of MMV technologies that have been employed to understand the fate of CO2 injected into the deep subsurface. The four existing end-to-end commercial CCS projects – Sleipner, Snøhvit, In Salah and Weyburn – are using a broad range of these technologies, and prove that, at a high level, geologic CO2 storage technologies are mature and capable of deploying at commercial scales. Whether wide scale deployment of CCS is currently or will soon be a cost-effective means of reducing greenhouse gas emissions is largely a function of climate policies which have yet to be enacted and the public’s willingness to incur costs to avoid dangerous anthropogenic interference with the Earth’s climate. There are significant benefits to be had by continuing to improve through research, development, and demonstration suite of existing CCS technologies. Nonetheless, it is clear that most of the core technologies required to address capture, transport, injection, monitoring, management and verification for ...
author Dooley, James J.
Davidson, Casie L.
Dahowski, Robert T.
author_facet Dooley, James J.
Davidson, Casie L.
Dahowski, Robert T.
author_sort Dooley, James J.
title An Assessment of the Commercial Availability of Carbon Dioxide Capture and Storage Technologies as of June 2009
title_short An Assessment of the Commercial Availability of Carbon Dioxide Capture and Storage Technologies as of June 2009
title_full An Assessment of the Commercial Availability of Carbon Dioxide Capture and Storage Technologies as of June 2009
title_fullStr An Assessment of the Commercial Availability of Carbon Dioxide Capture and Storage Technologies as of June 2009
title_full_unstemmed An Assessment of the Commercial Availability of Carbon Dioxide Capture and Storage Technologies as of June 2009
title_sort assessment of the commercial availability of carbon dioxide capture and storage technologies as of june 2009
publishDate 2014
url http://www.osti.gov/servlets/purl/967229
https://www.osti.gov/biblio/967229
https://doi.org/10.2172/967229
long_lat ENVELOPE(-41.417,-41.417,63.883,63.883)
geographic Sleipner
geographic_facet Sleipner
genre Snøhvit
genre_facet Snøhvit
op_relation http://www.osti.gov/servlets/purl/967229
https://www.osti.gov/biblio/967229
https://doi.org/10.2172/967229
doi:10.2172/967229
op_doi https://doi.org/10.2172/967229
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