…with less’ (electric vehicles, electrification, power-electronics, advanced materials, advanced manufacturing), switching coal to gas and LNG (50-60% lower CO2 per MWH), carbon capture and storage (CCS, blue hydrogen, CO2-EOR, CO2-to-materials)…
Chemical Looping Combustion is a next-generation technology for carbon capture, with potential to “clean up” fossil fuel power and obviate CO2 emissions. Costs and energy penalties are dramatically lower than…
…increasingly attractive as volumes per port scale past c80kTpa. Forward-thinking Majors are already investing to capture the future market. Finally, for a video of the construction vessel being constructed… https://youtu.be/IPQGXe4q4J0…
…We first looked at NET Power in a research note in 2019, exploring how next-generation combustion technologies could facilitate easier capture of CO2 (note here). However, we updated the model…
…create value while advancing the energy transition. $499.00 – Purchase Checkout Added to cart Carbon capture remains an “orphan technology”, absorbing just c0.1% of global CO2. The costs and challenges of current…
…margins. Pages 10-12 models the costs of post-combustion carbon capture, which could cut CO2 intensities by 25-90%, but also risks cutting margins by $2-4/bbl. Pages 13-14 present the opportunity for…
…renewables, 26% by shifting to less CO2-intensive fossil fuels (which still grow in absolute terms to 2050), 27% through carbon capture initiatives and 30% through industrial efficiency gains and demand-side…
…to double-count them. About c100 of the projects are hubs, which gather someone else’s CO2. Clearly, if I capture 1MTpa from my auto-thermal hydrogen unit, feed it into your 1MTpa…
…credits are assessed on pages 8-10, adjusting for the drawback that some of these carbon credits are not “real” CO2-offsets. The economics of future forest projects to capture CO2 are…
…to capture the CO2 for sequestration (including using MCFCs, an exciting technology that we recently reviewed in depth, chart below). It is better if the wood is not burned, but…