Skip to Main Content

Climate Change and Sustainability: Carbon Capture

U.S. Department of Energy

Carbon Capture and Storage 101

Carbon capture and sequestration/storage (CCS) is the process of capturing carbon dioxide (CO₂) formed during power generation and industrial processes and storing it so that it is not emitted into the atmosphere. CCS technologies have significant potential to reduce CO₂ emissions in energy systems. Facilities with CCS can capture almost all of the CO₂ they produce (some currently capture 90 or even 100 percent). This explainer provides an overview of CCS technology, including how it works, where it is currently used in the United States, barriers to more widespread use, and policies that may affect its development and deployment. It also includes a list of additional resources for further reading.

 

References
Gonzales, V., Krupnick, A., & Dunlap, L. (2020, May 6). Carbon Capture and Storage 101. Resources for the Future. 
https://www.rff.org/publications/explainers/carbon-capture-and-storage-101/

CO2

These uses of CO2 could cut emissions — and make trillions of dollars

It is well understood at this point that carbon dioxide is a deadly pollutant that is heating the atmosphere. What’s less well understood is that CO2 is also a useful feedstock, an input into a variety of industrial processes. From plastics to concrete, CO2 is a basic industrial building block — a valuable commodity.

To many climate campaigners, this suggests that maybe we should use more of it. Maybe, if the industries that use CO2 could be incentivized to increase their use, we could use enough to substantially decrease the amount we emit into the atmosphere.

Use more; emit less. That is the basic idea behind carbon capture and utilization (CCU), one of the hottest topics in clean energy these days.

Uses of captured carbon:

  1. Concrete building materials
  2. Liquid fuels
  3. Chemicals and plastics
  4. Algae
  5. Novel materials

 

References
Roberts, D. (2019, November 27). These uses of CO2 could cut emissions — and make trillions of dollars. Vox
https://www.vox.com/energy-and-environment/2019/11/13/20839531/climate-change-industry-co2-carbon-capture-utilization-storage-ccu

The Wall Street Journal

CNN