facebooktwittertelegramwhatsapp
copy short urlprintemail
+ A
A -
webmaster
Tribune News Network
Doha
Internationally renowned experts and top decision makers came together to share their insights and perspectives on the current and future role of Carbon Capture Utilisation and Storage (CCUS) in the fight against climate change at the latest CEO Roundtable held by the Al-Attiyah Foundation.
The roundtable, titled ‘Assessing the Role of Carbon Capture Utilisation and Storage (CCUS),’ featured distinguished speakers; Braulio Pikman a Technical Director at ERM, Ian Kuwahara the Director of Energy and Industrial Innovation at VERRA, Martina Lyons an Associate Programme Officer at IRENA and Andrea Zambianco the Fertilizer & Syngas Business Manager at Saipem.
At the event, held on the 8th of June in Doha and moderated by the acclaimed CGTN host Nawied Jabarkhyl, the experts discussed the growing importance of CCUS in the fight to reduce manmade carbon dioxide emissions released into the atmosphere.
CCUS is a suite of technologies to capture CO2 from carbon-emitting processes and to store it safely for the long term in underground rock formations or convert it into useful products or stable minerals. CCUS involves three steps aimed at reducing the release of anthropogenic CO2 emissions into the atmosphere. Carbon dioxide is captured from anthropogenic sources; it is transported to the injection site; and permanently stored in geological storage or utilised.
From this process, experts estimate that the best technology could capture up to 90% of the CO2 emissions produced from the use of fossil fuels in electricity generation and industrial processes.
Speakers agreed that CCUS has the potential to play a crucial role in tackling carbon emissions, including in hard to abate sectors such as manufacturing and industrial power, but noted further innovation is crucial for further adoption in key industries.
The landmark Sleipner CCS installation off Norway went live in 1996 as part of a natural gas development, and since that time roughly one million tonnes of CO2 per annum has been gathered, compressed and re-injected into subsea geological formations.
In March 2022 QatarEnergy (QE) outlined pioneering plans to scale up its CCUS and solar power generation capabilities as part of its drive to significantly reduce the carbon footprint at its facilities. In an update of its sustainability strategy, QE revealed it will develop “carbon capture and storage technology to capture over 11 million tonnes per annum of CO2 in Qatar by 2035.”
HE Abdullah bin Hamad Al-Attiyah, Chairman of the Board of Trustees at the Al-Attiyah Foundation and former Minister of Industry and Energy of Qatar highlighted the importance of technologies such as CCUS in the race to net zero by mid-century.
copy short url   Copy
09/06/2022
10