Carbon Capture, Utilisation and Storage (CCUS)

Carbon Capture, Utilisation and Storage (CCUS) is the methods and technologies that captures carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions from sources followed by recycling the CO2 for utilisation and determining safe and permanent storage options, so it will not enter the atmosphere. Despite the development of renewable energy sources and energy efficient systems to reduce the rate of CO2 emissions, the cumulative amount of CO2 in the atmosphere needs to be reduced to limit the detrimental impacts of climate change.

Reference Definition by IEA.org: Carbon Capture, Utilisation and Storage (CCUS) is an important emissions reduction technology that can be applied in the industrial sector and in power generation. These technologies involve the capture of carbon dioxide (CO2) from fuel combustion or industrial processes, the transport of CO2 via ship or pipeline, and either its use as a resource to create valuable products or services or its permanent storage deep underground in geological formations. CCUS technologies also provide the foundation for carbon removal or “negative emissions” when the CO2 comes from bio-based processes or directly from the atmosphere.

Related Definitions in the Project: The Plant and Process Unit 

Example Article of the Carbon Capture:

Carbon Capture Innovations Will Play A Key Role In Net-Zero Ambitions (Source: Oil Price on 11 December 2021): Following several announcements over the past year from oil majors investing heavily in carbon capture and storage (CCS) technologies, it appears progress has been made. Several governments and oil firms are working together to come up with various carbon capture solutions, from burying CO2 underground to pumping it into rocks. With the big players working together, this could be the mid-term answer to net-zero emissions the world’s been looking for. In the U.K. this week, the Climate Change Committee (CCC) advised the country that the use of the reservoirs under the North Sea for CCS would be most effective, as the technologies get up and running in the region. However, reusing existing onshore wells could also provide an inexpensive and simple means for storing carbon, without having to create new structures or look for alternative land. With operations already taking place in the North Sea, feasibility studies and the development of sites would be relatively simple. ...

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