German industry seeks CCS opportunities

  • : Emissions
  • 19/09/26

Industrial companies are eyeing opportunities for carbon capture and storage (CCS) projects in Germany, where the technology has failed to take off because of factors including strong public opposition.

CCS has been seen as politically untouchable in Germany, given public disapproval of onshore CO2 storage sites, and opposition from environmental groups, which say that the technology could be used to extend the life of coal power plants.

Germany has no large-scale CCS facilities in the pipeline. The country's only commercial-scale CCS project — a demonstration facility at Vattenfall's Janschwalde lignite-fired power plant — was shelved in 2011 because of a lack of political support.

The technology remains "highly controversial", chancellor Angela Merkel said in May.

But there are signs that the CCS debate is being revived.

Germany's climate cabinet unveiled a package of measures last week to put the country on track to meet its emissions reduction targets. The plan included CCS and carbon capture and usage as options to decarbonise industry.

The EU also wants to adopt a target to reach net zero emissions by 2050 — a move that Germany supports. Meeting this aim will be very difficult without CCS.

"There is a different discussion now, in the sense that CCS might be the last option to get rid of CO2 which is not avoidable with technologies," German chemicals firm BASF's head of energy and climate policy Claus Beckmann said.

German policymakers appear more willing now to address public concerns about CCS that have "hindered its uptake" to date, Global CCS Institute advocacy manager Guloren Turan said.

The economy ministry and environmental group WWF Deutschland were among the speakers at a CCS conference in Oslo earlier this month — a sign that their attitudes to the technology are thawing, some observers said.

Industrial CCS

The CCS debate in Germany has tended to focus on the technology's use in coal power plants, raising criticism from environmental groups which say that this would extend the lifespan of these plants and crowd out new renewables generation.

But some observers see a chance to shift the focus to CCS in industry, now that the government has agreed to close the country's coal-fuelled power generation by 2038.

The coal exit presents a "new window of opportunity to discuss [CCS] again in a more neutral context," the German cement association's head of political and economic affairs Manuel Mohr said.

The cement sector is betting on CCS to decarbonise industrial processes for which low-carbon alternatives do not yet exist, such as converting limestone into clinker, which accounts for more than half of the emissions from cement production.

CCS promises a less disruptive way of cutting emissions for cementmakers than finding new methods of production. With CCS, companies could continue using the same industrial processes but capture and store the CO2 they produce, resulting in zero emissions.

"Carbon capture will play the largest role when it comes to decarbonising our sector in the long run," Mohr said.

Subsea storage

Projects to store CO2 offshore, rather than onshore in Germany, could also make CCS more palatable to voters.

Onshore CCS remains "not very popular" in Germany, but subsea storage has less public opposition, German research institute the Wuppertal Institut's vice-president Manfred Fischedick said.

Some European countries are already storing CO2 in subsea sites. Norway has been using natural gas fields to store CO2 since the 1990s, and its government plans to launch a full chain of CCS infrastructure — Europe's first — based around a North Sea reservoir. This could enable CO2 emissions from other countries to be transported to Norway and permanently stored.

High costs

Even if the public warms to the idea, the cost of CCS remains prohibitively high.

The cost of capturing and storing a tonne of CO2 in the cement sector can stretch to €175/t CO2. At these costs, the EU carbon price is nowhere near high enough to persuade industrial companies to invest in CCS, instead of buying carbon credits that allow them to continue emitting. The cost of an EU carbon credit has ranged from roughly €18-€30/t CO2 in 2019.

Industrial firms say they need more support from governments to develop CCS, particularly to scale up pilot projects to commercial scale.

A project testing technology to separate CO2 during cement production at HeidelbergCement's plant in Lixhe, Belgium, has received €12mn in EU grants, alongside €9mn in private funding. The next stage of that project, to test whether the separated CO2 can be captured or used in another industrial process, is dependent on more public support, the firm said.

EU funding programmes have so far failed to get large-scale CCS projects off the ground. And some national governments have cancelled funding for projects at short notice, rattling investors.

A new EU fund to support technologies including CCS will open to applications next year. The "innovation fund", which is currently valued at around €11.5bn, will give money to CCS projects in the early stages of development, a move the EU hopes will avoid the pitfalls of previous funding mechanisms. An older EU fund, designed to give money to projects only when they had started operating, did not lead to any CCS projects being built.

Observers in Germany say the government must also establish a regulatory framework for CCS, to kick-start investments. A lack of regulatory certainty "prevents companies from investing" in the technology, WWF Deutschland said.


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24/05/03

UN carbon market enshrines appeal, grievance processes

UN carbon market enshrines appeal, grievance processes

Berlin, 3 May (Argus) — The much-debated procedure for appeal and grievance processes for people negatively affected by carbon mitigation activities was finally passed this week by the regulator of the future UN carbon market. The supervisory body of the Paris agreement crediting mechanism, under Article 6.4 of the Paris climate agreement, called the appeal and grievance procedure a "crucial step towards developing a new international carbon market that sets the benchmark for high integrity carbon credits". The mechanism is expected to be passed at the UN climate summit Cop 29 in November in Azerbaijan. The appeal and grievance procedure sets the fee for filing an appeal at $30,000, compared with the $5,000 fee suggested in earlier iterations, which was seen by some supervisory body members at this week's meeting in Bonn, Germany, as "too low for project developers, but too high for vulnerable groups". The fee will be waived for appellants who are appealing for vulnerable groups, such as local communities and indigenous peoples. But the supervisory body failed to pass the mechanism's long-awaited sustainable development tool, instead launching a call for input. Members had criticised the lack of a validation and verification process for the tool, and its unclear delimitations, given that some of its objectives will be addressed in future rules on carbon removals activities or the carbon reduction methodologies under the mechanism. Making the tool mandatory was demanded by both countries and non-governmental organisations at recent Cop summits, with the lack of a grievance process and sustainable development tool part of the reason why the pricing mechanism was not finalised at Cop 28 in Dubai last year. The sustainable development tool of the Kyoto Protocol's clean development mechanism (CDM), which the new mechanism broadly aims to replace, was never made mandatory. A total of 1,796 carbon mitigation activities have now requested to transition from the CDM to the new mechanism, of which more than 300 have not yet provided full details and could miss the 31 August deadline, the UN's climate arm said in Bonn. The supervisory body called for an extension of the transition period to 4 November. Work on the new mechanism's registry is also advancing, with the supervisory body agreeing to launch a consultation on the "legal, technical and financial implications of providing functionality for the treatment of financial security interests in Article 6.4 emissions reductions within the mechanism registry". By Chloe Jardine Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Beccs revenues 'dependent on sustainability'


24/05/03
24/05/03

Beccs revenues 'dependent on sustainability'

London, 3 May (Argus) — Danish state-controlled utility Orsted and UK utility Drax are increasingly dependent on sustainability criteria for their revenue streams from carbon removal (CDR) credit sales from bioenergy with carbon capture and storage (Beccs) projects, delegates heard at the Argus Biomass conference in London last week. "The key to be able to create such a project is to secure finance, which actually comes from the sale of carbon removal certificates," Orsted senior lead business developer for CCS David Fich said. Adding that the ability of companies to prove the sustainability of the biomass they source was now key to securing financing — including from CDR — for Beccs, and not only a matter of communicating that bioenergy and Beccs were environmentally friendly and carbon neutral businesses. Drax commercial director Angela Hepworth agreed: "Sustainability here is not a nice-to-have, this is the very foundation of our licence to upgrade and our ability to sell the credits and enable us to progress in these projects." Aligned standards within the industry and stronger incentives would encourage corporates to buy carbon credits against reputation backlashes, Hepworth added. Drax and Swedish utility Stockholm Exergi commissioned a methodology for measuring the net CO2 removal through Beccs published in October 2023, which was overall well-received by market participants. The utilities also presented it to the European Commission in the same month. A standardised approach to Beccs would encourage smaller buyers, which rely on certifications to identify the sustainable criteria of the carbon removal value chain when purchasing CDR credits, Fich said. While most larger corporates were doing their own due diligence. "The smaller buyers are those that are able to pay more," Fich said, adding that these companies were necessary to improve the liquidity of the market. Orsted signed a contract with Microsoft in May 2023 for the purchase of 2.76mn t of carbon removals over the next 10 years. Drax is also selling CDR certificates in the voluntary carbon market](https://direct.argusmedia.com/newsandanalysis/article/2441200) and is hoping to get the credits into the UK's trading scheme. Such deals "will help to make Beccs credits be seen in the more mainstream markets," Hepworth said. By Marta Imarisio Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Oregon renewable diesel pours into CFP bank


24/05/02
24/05/02

Oregon renewable diesel pours into CFP bank

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G7 coal exit goal puts focus on Germany, Japan and US


24/05/01
24/05/01

G7 coal exit goal puts focus on Germany, Japan and US

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G7 countries put timeframe on 'unabated' coal phase-out


24/04/30
24/04/30

G7 countries put timeframe on 'unabated' coal phase-out

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