Despite a deal that includes a transition “away
from fossil fuels” among the 200 countries gathered at the annual
United Nations Climate Change Conference, negotiators left the door
open to a wildly expensive and speculative tech fix that could
increase climate pollution while extending the life of the fossil fuel
industry.
The controversial technology called carbon capture and storage emerged
as a “flashpoint” among world leaders who met in Dubai to explore
climate action. That probably shouldn’t come as any surprise given
this year’s conference was hosted by the United Arab Emirates, an oil
giant, and that COP28 President Sultan Al Jaber went so far as to
contend there is “no science” behind the worldwide calls to end fossil
fuels.
Major oil and gas-producing countries use carbon capture and storage
to clamor for continued fossil fuel use and production. These
countries are promoting carbon capture as a means of “abating” climate
change pollutants because it makes them money and slows the transition
away from fossil fuels.
Carbon capture and storage is supposed to capture carbon dioxide
emissions from industrial sources and pump them deep underground.
However, after dedicating more than 15 years to this field, I know
that the technology is a costly distraction and an ineffective carbon
solution.
A new study offers hard numbers to demonstrate that using carbon
capture to compensate for ongoing fossil fuel burning is an economic
and climate fallacy. This confirms my understanding that relying on
carbon capture would waste trillions of dollars when compared to
renewable energy solutions.
The report from the University of Oxford finds that net-zero pathways
that are heavily dependent on carbon capture and storage will cost at
least $1 trillion more per year than scenarios involving renewables.
It explains that oil and gas-producing countries pushing for carbon
capture technology as a substitute for immediate emissions cuts are
grossly underestimating the costs of carbon capture and storage.
Its research demonstrates that heavy dependence on carbon capture and
storage to reach net zero targets around 2050 would be “highly
economically damaging,” costing at least $30 trillion more than a
route based primarily on renewable energy, energy efficiency and
electrification. The report also provides “the first publicly
available, comprehensive summary of estimates of the cost of fossil
power with carbon capture and storage over the last 40 years, and
finds no evidence of falling costs.”
Oxford’s researchers rightfully warned that carbon capture and storage
should only be used in very select industries in which abating climate
pollutants is especially hard, not as a masquerade for continued
fossil fuel production and consumption. Industries like cement
production and some chemical sector processes will require carbon
capture to reach our climate goals, but the problem is that’s not
where the technology is being used.
Carbon capture fails as a climate solution because virtually all of
the technology is being used to produce and burn more oil and methane
gas, creating even more climate pollution. This process pipes the
“captured” carbon dioxide and injects it into oil fields to extract
additional oil and gas that would otherwise be trapped underground.
Of the 12 commercial carbon capture projects in operation in 2021,
more than 90 percent were engaged in this process of “enhanced oil
recovery,” according to an industry report. Another report concluded
that throughout history, around 80-90 percent of all captured carbon
is used for enhanced oil recovery, which itself leads to more carbon
dioxide emissions.
The financial waste of carbon capture makes it even more imperative to
avoid falling for this climate change mirage. The Department of Energy
has wasted billions of dollars on failed carbon capture demonstration
projects. Even with these massive taxpayer subsidies, carbon capture
companies continue to fail. Adding insult to injury, carbon capture
companies also qualify for massive tax credits known as 45Q with
virtually no verification or accountability that they capture carbon
emissions, making it rife for fraud and abuse.
For years, I wanted to believe that carbon capture and storage could
be part of our climate change solution. And taxpayers have spent
billions of dollars subsidizing the oil and gas industry to support
carbon capture and storage research and experimental projects. Yet all
of those projects have not only consistently failed to reduce carbon
dioxide, but now the technology is being used as nothing more than a
guise for continued fossil fuel production and consumption.
Today we know that shifting to renewable energy, which actually works
and is much less expensive, is our solution. We cannot waste trillions
of dollars on the false promises of carbon capture and storage.
We have to learn from our mistakes; our future isn’t in oil and gas.
Sensible climate solutions lie in our investments in renewable energy
— not more subsidies for fossil fuel polluters.
Robert Warren Howarth, Ph.D. is an Earth systems scientist with
more than 40 years of experience in research and policy related to
human-accelerated global change. Howarth has served as a tenured
faculty member at Cornell University since 1985, published more than
200 peer-reviewed papers and served on committees and panels for the
National Academy of Sciences, the International Council of Science and
the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
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