January 12, 2024
By
Volker Sick
Not all carbon-capture projects pay
off for the climate –
we mapped the pros and cons of each and found clear winners and losers
Capturing carbon dioxide from the air or
industries and recycling it can sound like a win-win climate solution.
The greenhouse gas stays out of the atmosphere where it can warm the
planet, and it avoids the use of more fossil fuels.
But not all carbon-capture projects offer the same economic and
environmental benefits. In fact, some can actually worsen climate
change.
I lead the Global CO₂ Initiative at the University of Michigan, where
my colleagues and I study how to put captured carbon dioxide (CO₂) to
use in ways that help protect the climate. To help figure out which
projects will pay off and make these choices easier, we mapped out the
pros and cons of the most common carbon sources and uses.
Replacing fossil fuels with captured carbon
Carbon plays a crucial role in many parts of our lives. Materials such
as fertilizer, aviation fuel, textiles, detergents and much more
depend on it. But years of research and the climate changes the world
is already experiencing have made abundantly clear that humanity needs
to urgently end the use of fossil fuels and remove the excess CO₂ from
the atmosphere and oceans that have resulted from their use.
Some carbon materials
can be replaced with carbon-free alternatives, such as using renewable
energy to produce electricity. However, for other uses, such as
aviation fuel or plastics, carbon will be harder to replace. For
these, technologies are being developed to capture and recycle carbon.
Capturing excess CO₂ –
from the oceans, atmosphere or industry – and using it for new
purposes is called carbon capture, utilization and sequestration, or
CCUS. Of all the options to handle captured CO₂, my colleagues and I
favor using it to make products, but let’s examine all of them.
CCUS best and worst
cases
With each method, the combination of the source of the CO₂ and its end
use, or disposition, determines its environmental and economic
consequences.
In the best cases, the process will leave less CO₂ in the environment
than before. A strong example of this is using captured CO₂ to produce
construction materials, such as concrete. It seals away the captured
carbon and creates a product that has economic value.
Comparing CCUS by
source and disposition
The value or risk of capturing and using or sequestering CO2 strongly
depends on the source, whether fossil fuels, limestone, biomass, air
or ocean, and how it is stored or used.
A few methods are carbon-neutral, meaning they
add no new CO₂ to the environment. For example, when using CO₂
captured from the air or oceans and turning it into fuel or food, the
carbon returns to the atmosphere, but the use of captured carbon
avoids the need for new carbon from fossil fuels.
Other combinations, however, are harmful because they increase the
amount of excess CO₂ in the environment. One of the most common
underground storage methods – enhanced oil recovery – is a prime
example.
Underground carbon storage pros and cons
Projects for years have been capturing excess CO₂ and storing it
underground in natural structures of porous rock, such as deep saline
reservoirs, basalt or depleted oil or gas wells. This is called carbon
capture and sequestration (CCS). If done right, geologic storage can
durably remove large amounts of CO₂ from the atmosphere.
When the CO₂ is captured from air, water or biomass, this creates a
carbon-negative process – less carbon is in the air afterward.
However, if the CO₂ instead comes from new fossil fuel emissions, such
as from a coal- or gas-fired power plant, carbon neutrality isn’t
possible. No carbon-capture technology works at 100% efficiency, and
some CO₂ will always escape into the air.
Capturing CO₂ is also expensive. If there is no product to sell,
underground storage can become a costly service ultimately covered by
taxes or fees, similar to paying for trash disposal.
Slow growth: Worldwide commercial CCS
facilities
Globally, carbon capture and storage facilities have
been slow to come online. In 2022, only 30 commercial facilities were
operating, with a capacity of 42.6 million metric tons per year.
A bar chart shows 9 deep saline formation projects compared to
22 EOR projects in 2022.
One way to lower the
cost is to sell the captured CO₂ for enhanced oil recovery – a common
practice that pumps captured CO₂ into oil fields to push more oil out
of the ground. While most of the CO₂ is expected to stay underground,
the result is more fossil fuels that will eventually send more carbon
dioxide into the atmosphere, eliminating the environmental benefit.
Using captured carbon for food and fuel
Short-lived materials made from CO₂ include aviation fuels, food,
drugs and working fluids used in machining metals. These items aren’t
particularly durable and will soon decompose, releasing CO₂ again. But
the sale of the products yields economic value, helping pay for the
process.
This CO₂ can be captured from the air again and used to make a future
generation of products, which would create a sustainable, essentially
circular carbon economy. However, this only works if the CO₂ is
captured from the air or oceans. If the CO₂ comes from fossil fuel
sources instead, this is new CO₂ that will be added to the environment
when the products decompose. So even if it is captured again, it will
worsen climate change.
Storing carbon in materials, such as concrete
Some minerals and waste materials can convert CO₂ to limestone or
other rock materials. The long-lived materials created this way can be
very durable, with lifetimes of longer than 100 years
A good example is concrete. CO₂ can react with particles in concrete,
causing it to mineralize into solid form. The result is a useful
product that can be sold instead of being stored underground. Other
durable products include aggregates used in road construction, carbon
fiber used in automotive, aerospace and defense ]applications and some
polymers.
These materials provide the best combination of environmental impact
and economic benefit when they are made with CO₂ captured from the
atmosphere rather than new fossil fuel emissions.
Choose your carbon projects wisely
CCUS can be a useful solution, and governments have started pouring
billions of dollars into its development. It must be closely
monitored to ensure that carbon-capture technologies will not delay
fossil fuel phaseout. It is an all-hands-on-deck effort to take the
best combinations of CO₂ sources and disposition to achieve rapid
scaling at an affordable cost to society.
Because climate change is such a complex problem that is harming
people throughout the world, as well as future generations, I believe
it is imperative that actions are not only fast, but also well thought
out and based in evidence.
Fred Mason, Gerry Stokes, Susan Fancy and Stephen McCord of the Global
CO₂ Initiative contributed to this article.
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