Europe relaunches CCUS knowledge exchange network to support industry’s climate action
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A Europe-wide knowledge sharing network has received fresh funding from the European Commission to support and inspire major carbon capture, utilisation and storage (CCUS) projects in their efforts to deliver climate action.
The revitalised European CCUS Projects Network will connect industry partners involved in real-life CCUS projects, which have potential to deliver significant carbon emission reductions in Europe’s industrial regions.
The network, managed by a Secretariat of pooled international expertise, will provide member projects with opportunities for sharing knowledge and best practice alongside guidance on how to increase public awareness and acceptance of CCUS technologies.
The Secretariat will ultimately provide advice to the Commission on the most effective way to deliver a commercially viable and technologically sound CCUS network, which will help Europe’s member states meet climate targets enshrined in the Paris Agreement.
Projects being considered as network members will have a focus on carbon capture and storage (CCS) and/or CO2 utilisation, and should demonstrate substantial overall CO2 emissions reduction in their lifecycle analysis as well as a commitment to building a European CCUS industry through knowledge sharing.
The Secretariat – which includes project lead Trinomics (Netherlands), Bellona Europa (Belgium), DECHEMA (Germany), Scottish Carbon Capture & Storage (UK), SINTEF (Norway) and TNO (Netherlands) – is keen to contact existing and emerging CCUS projects across Europe, which have significant climate mitigation potential and are close to being ready for operation.
Hans Bolscher, project coordinator, Trinomics, said: “The knowledge-sharing component of the CCUS Network is a crucial step towards promoting an environment in which stakeholders can work and learn from each other, while also identifying areas to address in the CCUS domain in the present and future. It also presents an excellent opportunity to develop an approach to disseminate knowledge to the wider public. By increasing public acceptance of CCUS projects in the EU and beyond, confidence and trust can be drawn to such technologies.”
The revitalised network replaces the European CCS Demonstration Project Network, established by the Commission in 2009 to accelerate the deployment of safe, large-scale and commercially viable CCS projects.
The European CCUS Projects Network in context:
The European CCUS Project Network is a two-year project funded by the European Commission, under service contract No ENER/C2/2017-65/SI2.793333. The Commission recognises the role of CCS and CCU as a crucial combination of technologies necessary for the decarbonisation of heavy industry and the fossil-fuel based industry sector. It has implemented a number of measures to support delivery, including the European Strategic Energy Technology Plan (SET-Plan), funding through the European Energy Programme for Recovery (EEPR), NER300, H2020, ETS Innovation Fund and the Connecting Europe Facility (CEF).
The European Commission’s Clean Planet for All communication (November 2018), which is a long-term vision paper for a prosperous, modern, competitive and climate neutral economy, features CCS as its seventh building block.
Achieving the EU’s 2050 climate targets will require the decarbonisation of not only electricity supply but also industrial heating, industrial-process emissions and transport – areas where CCS and CCU are anticipated to have a significant mitigation role. Full-scale CCUS chains are already operating outside of the EU, in both power and industrial settings.
A Europe-wide knowledge sharing network has received fresh funding from the European Commission to support and inspire major carbon capture, utilisation and storage (CCUS) projects in their efforts to deliver climate action.
The revitalised European CCUS Projects Network will connect industry partners involved in real-life CCUS projects, which have potential to deliver significant carbon emission reductions in Europe’s industrial regions.
The network, managed by a Secretariat of pooled international expertise, will provide member projects with opportunities for sharing knowledge and best practice alongside guidance on how to increase public awareness and acceptance of CCUS technologies.
The Secretariat will ultimately provide advice to the Commission on the most effective way to deliver a commercially viable and technologically sound CCUS network, which will help Europe’s member states meet climate targets enshrined in the Paris Agreement.
Projects being considered as network members will have a focus on carbon capture and storage (CCS) and/or CO2 utilisation, and should demonstrate substantial overall CO2 emissions reduction in their lifecycle analysis as well as a commitment to building a European CCUS industry through knowledge sharing.
The Secretariat – which includes project lead Trinomics (Netherlands), Bellona Europa (Belgium), DECHEMA (Germany), Scottish Carbon Capture & Storage (UK), SINTEF (Norway) and TNO (Netherlands) – is keen to contact existing and emerging CCUS projects across Europe, which have significant climate mitigation potential and are close to being ready for operation.
Hans Bolscher, project coordinator, Trinomics, said: “The knowledge-sharing component of the CCUS Network is a crucial step towards promoting an environment in which stakeholders can work and learn from each other, while also identifying areas to address in the CCUS domain in the present and future. It also presents an excellent opportunity to develop an approach to disseminate knowledge to the wider public. By increasing public acceptance of CCUS projects in the EU and beyond, confidence and trust can be drawn to such technologies.”
The revitalised network replaces the European CCS Demonstration Project Network, established by the Commission in 2009 to accelerate the deployment of safe, large-scale and commercially viable CCS projects.
The European CCUS Projects Network in context:
The European CCUS Project Network is a two-year project funded by the European Commission, under service contract No ENER/C2/2017-65/SI2.793333. The Commission recognises the role of CCS and CCU as a crucial combination of technologies necessary for the decarbonisation of heavy industry and the fossil-fuel based industry sector. It has implemented a number of measures to support delivery, including the European Strategic Energy Technology Plan (SET-Plan), funding through the European Energy Programme for Recovery (EEPR), NER300, H2020, ETS Innovation Fund and the Connecting Europe Facility (CEF).
The European Commission’s Clean Planet for All communication (November 2018), which is a long-term vision paper for a prosperous, modern, competitive and climate neutral economy, features CCS as its seventh building block.
Achieving the EU’s 2050 climate targets will require the decarbonisation of not only electricity supply but also industrial heating, industrial-process emissions and transport – areas where CCS and CCU are anticipated to have a significant mitigation role. Full-scale CCUS chains are already operating outside of the EU, in both power and industrial settings.
(Photo: Getty Images / BlackJack3D)