Carbon Capture and Sequestration (CCS)
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This project aims to build consensus on guidelines to ensure that CCS projects are done safely and effectively. These guidelines will be vital towards ensuring public acceptance and confidence in CCS technologies and practices, and ensuring that costs are affordable in the long run.

Background: Why Carbon Capture and Sequestration?

Carbon capture and sequestration (CCS), also know as carbon storage, is gaining momentum as an option to reduce heat-trapping greenhouse gases. CCS requires capturing carbon dioxide from power plants and other industrial facilities, transporting it to suitable locations, injecting it into deep underground geological formations, and monitoring its behavior. A large body of scientific and technical work is underway to overcome barriers to greater deployment of CCS, but policy and regulatory issues need greater attention before these practices can be widely used. For example, there are no widely-approved standards for siting and monitoring of CCS projects. Likewise, no widely-accepted methodology exists to govern accounting of greenhouse gases stored in CCS projects. Standards and methods such as these will be important to ensure that projects are conducted safely.

Strategy

The WRI CCS Project is a stakeholder partnership between businesses, governments, NGOs, and other interested parties designed to build consensus on CCS project guidelines that ensure public confidence in these practices. Our initial work is focused primarily on the deployment of a domestic framework for CCS regulation in the United States, but follow-on work in key developing countries is also expected.

WRI has brought together a diverse group of over 75 stakeholder organizations interested in CCS. In addition to workshops and stakeholder meetings, WRI has also created two working groups to focus on key issues: a siting/monitoring group and a liability/accounting group.

WRI is also developing a series of issue papers to address specific CCS topics, such as public acceptability, long-term liability, greenhouse gas accounting, and the use of public lands.

Project Partners:

The following is a list of some of the groups we are working with to develop safe, transparent, and efficient practices for carbon capture and sequestration.

Advanced Resources International
AIG Corporate
AJW, Inc.
Alston and Bird, LLC
American Electric Power
American Petroleum Institute
Battelle Memorial Institute
Bellona Foundation
BP
Carnegie Mellon University
Chevron Corporation
Clean Air Task Force
Conoco-Phillips
Duke Energy
Energy Research Centre of the Netherlands
Environmental Defense
Falcon Gas
Foundation Coal Corporation
FutureGen Industrial Alliance
General Electric
Great Plains Institute
Ground Water Protection Council
House Science Subcommittee on Energy
House Science Subcommittee on Environment, Technology, and Standards
Illinois EPA
Illinois State Geological Survey
Industrial Economics Incorporated
J.P. Morgan
Joint Global Change Research Institute
Kinder Morgan
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
Marsh USA Inc.
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
National Commission on Energy Policy
National Energy Technology Lab
Natural Resource Defense Council
Office of Congressman Jerry Costello
Office of Senator Joseph Lieberman
Office of Senator Robert C. Byrd
Ohio Environmental Council
Pew Center on Global Climate Change
Public Utility Commission of Ohio
Schlumberger
Shell
Southern Company
Texas Bureau of Economic Geology
University of Minnesota
University of Texas, LBJ School
U.S. Department of Energy
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Western Governors Association
Xcel Energy