@IEEFAEurope
The Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis (IEEFA) examines issues related to energy markets, trends, and policies.
Background information on CCS
Slides: The carbon dioxide disposal chain: Elements, goals and risks
Document
Slides: The carbon dioxide disposal chain: Elements, goals and risks
Fact Sheet: Risks across the carbon dioxide disposal chain
Document
Fact Sheet: Risks across the carbon dioxide disposal chain
IEEFA reports and analysis on CCS
The runaway cost of UK carbon capture and storage subsidies
The runaway cost of UK carbon capture and storage subsidies
Despite reduced carbon capture and storage (CCS) targets in the UK’s most recent Carbon Budget, the reliance on this unproven and expensive technology remains a high-risk strategy
Carbon capture and storage: Europe's climate gamble
Carbon capture and storage: Europe's climate gamble
Europe’s bet on carbon capture and storage (CCS) to reach net zero is too reliant upon theoretical and unproven technical solutions.
Minimal role for carbon capture, utilization, and storage (CCUS) in IEA's World Energy Outlook 2025
Minimal role for carbon capture, utilization, and storage (CCUS) in IEA's World Energy Outlook 2025
The IEA’s minimal role for CCUS in the Net Zero Emissions (NZE) by 2050 Scenario reflects a multi-year downgrading of the technology, with renewables, electrification, fuel switching, and energy efficiency projected to contribute over 82% of the emissions reductions needed to achieve net zero.
Norway’s Sleipner and Snøhvit CCS: Industry models or cautionary tales?
Norway’s Sleipner and Snøhvit CCS: Industry models or cautionary tales?
Sleipner and Snøhvit demonstrate carbon capture and storage is not without material ongoing risks that may ultimately negate some or all the benefits it seeks to create.
Gorgon shows CCS aims are built on technical uncertainty
Gorgon shows CCS aims are built on technical uncertainty
New data from Chevron on its Gorgon carbon capture and storage (CCS) project in Western Australia shows the lowest amount of carbon dioxide (CO2) captured and stored for a year since the project, the world’s largest CCS project, started in August 2019.
Blue hydrogen: Not clean, not low carbon, not a solution
Blue hydrogen: Not clean, not low carbon, not a solution
The U.S. government significantly understates the likely impact of producing hydrogen from fossil fuels on global warming in at least four ways.
The carbon capture crux: Lessons learned
The carbon capture crux: Lessons learned
Carbon capture and storage (CCS) is a 50-year-old technology with variable results in capturing and storing carbon dioxide. Project developers have almost always reused the captured carbon for enhanced oil recovery (EOR), producing oil and gas and more emissions. Successful CCUS exceptions mainly exist in the natural gas processing sector serving the fossil fuel industry, leading to further emissions.
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