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CCUS will not Play a Major Role in Steel Decarbonization

WriteCanvas News


Despite support for the technology at the 2023 COP28 climate conference, a new report from the Institute of Energy Economics and Financial Analysis (IEEFA) indicates that carbon capture use and storage (CCUS) is unlikely to play a major role in steel decarbonization.

There are other, more efficient ways for the steel industry to cut emissions.

Key Takeaways:

CCUS has a history of underperformance and failure after being implemented in a variety of sectors for several decades.

The world’s sole commercial-scale CCUS plant for gas-based steel production has extremely low capture rates. Almost nothing is planned for commercial-scale CCUS plants for coal-based steelmaking, and none exist anywhere in the world.

Major steel producers are replacing their coal-consuming blast furnaces with direct reduced iron (DRI)-based steelmaking. CCUS risks falling behind, just as it did in other industries, such as electricity production.

It appears increasingly likely that steel consumers will not want coal in their supply chains going forward due to CCUS’s subpar performance. Plans for decarbonization by steel companies that insist that CCUS will be important should raise red flags for investors.

Challenges:

The steel industry is seeing a rise in the use of green hydrogen to power the production of steel from DRI. According to IEEFA’s research, this technology provides steelmakers with a far more promising route to reduce their emissions than CCUS. This is especially true when combined with electric arc furnaces (EAFs) powered by renewable electricity. Despite this, a large number of global steel producers continue to insist that CCUS will help them reduce their carbon footprint.

Secondly, doubts regarding the long-term viability of geological CO2 storage increase the risks associated with CCUS. These include considerable financial, technological, and environmental hazards. Each CCUS project is distinct, which restricts technological advancement and cost savings. The cost of implementing carbon capture has not decreased much in decades, but the cost of technologies like battery storage and renewable energy has fallen and will continue to fall.

Thirdly, the CCUS capture rates are not comparable.

The low capture rate of CCUS is a critical problem frequently overlooked. CCUS initiatives have had persistent difficulty achieving the desired capture rates. Furthermore, targeted carbon capture typically emits far less carbon than total carbon emissions. Low-CO2 capturing installations cannot be considered decarbonized.

The impact on the auto sector:

“Hard to abate” and “carbon capture and storage” are frequently used interchangeably. Some steelmakers appear to be using the term “hard to abate” as a justification for plans that are indefinite in the future decades while largely carrying on with business as usual.

Low capture rates will prevent any CCUS installations from sufficiently reducing the carbon footprint of steel production to meet the growing demand for truly green steel from steel consumers. Automakers are already executing buy orders for environmentally friendly steel produced with nearly zero emissions by employing green hydrogen. Soon, more precise definitions of what “green steel” really is should be anticipated.

Use case:

Less than 20% of all Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions from Emirates Steel Arkan’s DRI-based steel plant were accounted for by the industry’s first and only commercial-scale CCUS plant, the Al Reyadah CCUS facility in the United Arab Emirates, in 2020 and 2021. Moreover, the captured CO2 is put to use in enhanced oil recovery (EOR), which increases the amount of fossil fuels produced and carbon emissions released.

Emirates Steel Arkan is now utilizing alternative technology for steel decarbonization, which it seems to think is more successful. The business is deploying green hydrogen to launch the first DRI-EAF pilot project.

CCUS is not likely to contribute to decarbonization in situations where there are better and more affordable alternatives. The production of genuinely low-carbon steel is made possible by the use of green hydrogen in DRI and renewable energy to run EAFs, a feat that CCUS appears unable to duplicate.

Analyst and co-authors notes:

Co-author and Global Steel Financial Analyst for IEEFA Soroush Basirat states: “No other commercial-scale carbon capture facilities for steelmaking have been built, despite being operational for eight years.

Lead Steel Financial Analyst at IEEFA Simon Nicholas said, “Major steelmakers’ plans for CCUS tend to be vague and push commercial-scale implementation of the technology off into the 2040s. With almost 50 years of existence, CCUS technology has a track record of severe underperformance.”

“The International Energy Agency (IEA) has historically relied on CCUS to achieve decarbonization, but it now seems to be beginning to change its perspective on the long-term decarbonization of the steel sector. In upcoming updates, we anticipate that the IEA will keep downgrading the contribution that CCUS is expected to make to the decarbonization of steel,” adds Nicholas.


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A Green Leap:  Reliance & DBS Partner for Compressed Biogas Project


Reliance Industries Limited (RIL) and DBS Bank India have joined forces to promote the adoption of compressed biogas (CBG) in the country.  The country produces a significant amount of agricultural residue, which is usually burnt in the absence of the required processing infrastructure and logistical support.

The partnership:

This collaboration will address the challenge of unorganized agricultural residue management and unlock the potential of CBG as a sustainable alternative to imported fossil fuels.

Reliance is investing in establishing 100 CBG plants across India over the next five years, consuming over 5.5 million tonnes of agricultural residue and organic waste annually. This initiative will contribute to a projected reduction of nearly 2 million tonnes of carbon dioxide emissions.

Recognizing the need for a customized approach, DBS Bank India has developed a unique supply chain financing program tailored to the specific requirements of RIL’s CBG project. This program will empower vendor partners, primarily farmers, to aggregate agri-residue efficiently and ensure competitive logistics.

Advantages:

Reliance’s CBG plants will not only reduce air pollution but also generate Fermented Organic Manure (FOM), improving soil fertility and reducing dependence on chemical fertilizers. This creates a virtuous cycle that benefits the environment and farmers’ livelihoods.

This collaboration aligns with India’s vision for a clean energy transition and supports the Global Biofuel Alliance’s aim to replace fossil fuels with sustainable alternatives. Reliance’s flagship CBG production facility in Barabanki, Uttar Pradesh, exemplifies this commitment, showcasing world-class technology and is expected to reduce 40,000 tonnes of CO2 emissions annually equivalent to absorptions by 15,000-acre rainforest.

Quotes:

Rajat Verma, Managing Director and Head of Institutional Banking at DBS Bank India said, “India’s green energy sector is crucial to its net-zero strategy. We proudly partner with Reliance Industries to empower the journey towards a sustainable future through innovative banking solutions.”

Harindra K Tripathi, Head Bio-energy Business, RIL, said, “Compressed Biogas plants are a key solution to utilizing organic waste and reducing air pollution. Our CBG plants will also contribute to FOM production, enhancing soil fertility and reducing fertilizer use.”


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COP28

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COP28: A Mixed Bag

Gayatri Ramanathan


When the dust settles on COP28, it will go down as one of the more momentous ones.

For the first time, the final text includes language on fossil fuels with countries agreeing that fossil fuels need to be replaced with clean energy to reach global net zero by 2050. The agreement calls for a tripling of renewable energy by 2030 and a doubling of energy efficiency.

Although the text contains references to ‘transition’ fuels, the emphasis remains on switching to renewable energy. It also calls for accelerating efforts for phase-down of unabated coal power. The UAE agreement says that new national climate pledges should be delivered in late 2024.

For a meeting that was supposed to focus on climate finance, COP28 was a mixed bag. The Loss and Damage Fund was established on Day 1. The 2nd replenishment of the Green Climate Fund stands at $12.8 billion. The next COP in Azerbaijan in 2024 now becomes the year for finance when major political and technical processes must land to address these gaps.

The Dubai meeting sent some key signals on the need for international financial reform assisting poor nations with the energy transition, and adapting to climate impacts. The lack of accompanying finance makes the energy transition a harder lift.

The adaptation text is weaker than previous versions with few concrete metrics or definitions, but a plan to get there over 2 years. There is a significant reference to rich countries paying poorer countries to use their forests as carbon offsets, which has raised questions about sovereignty and equity.

Trade has been raised as an issue with countries looking to work together on fair aligned policies that support global climate-friendly supply chains. There is a “Roadmap to Mission 1.5 degree C” on international cooperation ahead of COP30 in Brazil, a Brazilian initiative.

Adaptation was supposed to be the 3rd key issue addressed in COP28. Here the final agreement is quite weak and watered down with the text having been cut to exclude targets and timelines, no indication of scaling up adaptation finance, and loopholes to delay/deny financial obligations. On the Global Goal on Adaptation, the language has been watered down from a ‘commitment’ to ‘seek to’. With 84 mentions of the word ‘adaptation’, there is no sense that there are hard limits to humankind’s ability to adapt to climate change, as outlined by IPCC.

But more than all of this, the sheer number of oil and gas executives and big agriculture and meat business representatives present at the meeting shows that these key emitters now see the writing on the wall. We should soon see action from these key industries on decarbonizing. Equity and finance will continue to be key issues well into COP 29 in view of the looming global recession and the wars in Ukraine and Gaza.

The article is written by Gayatri Ramanathan, an Energy and Climate Action Expert. The views expressed are personal.

 

 

 

 


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Banking, SBTi

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4 Global Banks Exit SBTi

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Four global banks including HSBC, Standard Chartered, Société Generale, and ABN AMRO have exited the Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi).

Citing sources, Reuters reported that The banks have abandoned SBTi efforts to validate their goals because of concerns it could hinder their ability to continue financing fossil fuels.

According to media reports, some banks claimed the SBTi requirements would make it more difficult for them to work with and support businesses as they navigated the climate transition, especially those clients in less developed markets who still relied on fossil fuels for their energy needs.

ESG Today wrote that the banks declared their intention to resign before the organization’s planned introduction of a new standard that will evaluate financial institutions’ efforts toward achieving net zero. The standard will have stringent limitations on financing for fossil fuels.

Interestingly, every bank is a signatory to the Net Zero Banking Alliance (NZBA), an alliance of banks organized by the UN with the mission of advancing global net zero goals through their financing operations. Members of the NZBA pledge to set 2030 financed emissions targets, initially concentrated on important emissions-intensive sectors, and to transition operational and attributable greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from their lending and investment portfolios to align with net zero pathways by 2050.

According to media reports that cited the SBTi, the organization got hundreds of responses in response to its exposure standard for June 2023. Consequently, it has incorporated draft Fossil Fuel Finance Position Paper criteria into a pilot version of near-term criteria and recommendations for financial institutions. The finalized criteria aim to remove common barriers to adopting science-based targets and reduce reliance on fossil fuels, highlighting the importance of financial intermediaries in decarbonizing the global economy.

2015: SBTi was founded as a collaboration between CDP, WRI, WWF, and UNGC, to establish science-based environmental target setting as a standard corporate practice
2022: SBTi established standards for financial institutions’ net zero goals
June 2023: SBTi released a position paper on fossil fuel financing restrictions


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COP28, Fossil fuels, Energy transition

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COP28: Phasing Out or Phasing Down Fossil Fuels?

Renjini Liza Varghese


The annual event, – Conference of Parties COP28, no doubt, will be a critical crossroads for energy transition.

Starting tomorrow (30 November to 12 December), the signatories will assemble in Dubai to deliberate and conclude on substantial action to mitigate climate change. The Indian Prime Minister, Mr. Narendra Modi, also will be present during the first 2 days. It may be business as usual for those who are offering their first-ever review. The decibel levels may rise when the bossiest polluters (China, US) are asked to commit more to the loss and damage fund.

I believe that the debate on phasing out versus phasing down fossil fuels taking center stage at COP 28 this year. While the decision to completely phase out will be a bold and decisive step towards a cleaner, energy future, phasing down offers a more pragmatic approach, particularly for developing nations like India.

It is a fact that like many other developing countries, India’s energy landscape is currently dominated by fossil fuels, with coal alone accounting for 49% of electricity generation. The country’s ambitious renewable energy targets, aiming for 500 GW of installed capacity by 2030, are commendable. However, the sheer scale of India’s energy demand necessitates a gradual transition, which balances environmental protection and economic growth.

According to me, phasing down fossil fuels, rather than an abrupt phase-out approach, presents a more viable strategy. This approach allows the country to utilize its existing fossil fuel infrastructure while simultaneously investing in cleaner energy sources like renewables and hydrogen. The gradual reduction in fossil fuel reliance ensures a smooth transition without jeopardizing energy security.

The United Nations report, projecting continued fossil fuel production growth until 2030 for coal and 2050 for oil and gas, further supports the phasing-down approach. This projection highlights the need for a realistic transition timeline that aligns with global fossil fuel production trends.

Assessing countries’ climate mitigation goals only after fossil fuel production peaks makes sense. Because, by that time, nations will have a clearer roadmap for their energy transition and will have developed sustainable solutions like hydrogen to meet rising energy demands.

That is why I expect COP28 to delve into the phasing out versus phasing down debate, with discussions on stocktaking, commitments from major emitters like China and the US, and the loss and damage fund. I also see the anti-ESG lobbying taking center stage during this year. However, the real impetus for actionable change is likely to emerge from the phasing out versus phasing down conversations.

Key Takeaways:

Phasing down fossil fuels offers a more pragmatic approach to energy transition for developing countries like India.

India’s energy needs necessitate a gradual transition that balances environmental sustainability with economic growth.

Assessing climate mitigation goals after fossil fuel production peaks provides a more realistic timeline.

COP28 is expected to be a critical turning point in the global energy transition.


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COP28, Energy

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Will COP28 fulfil its energy commitment?

WriteCanvas News


Even before COP28 is formally inaugurated on November 30, 2023, concerns are being raised about the energy strategy proposed by the COP28 President, Dr Sultan Al Jaber.

A coalition of 100 organizations, led by 350.org and Oil Change International, in an open letter, highlighted the energy strategy outlined by the COP28 president in two recent communications.

The open letter addresses concerns raised by Dr Al Jaber, who vetoed an ambitious outcome on fossil fuels and energy in two previous letters to diplomats and civil society.

The open letter advocates for a comprehensive, equitable, and funded phase-out of fossil fuels. It advises against pushing unrealistic measures like carbon capture and storage with energy-related outcomes.

The open letter emphasizes the need for COP28’s energy package outcome to be a formal part of the decision text, focusing on ending fossil fuel infrastructure expansion and phase-out.

“The Cop28 President’s leadership is under scrutiny. Dr. Sultan Al Jaber is the CEO of one of the largest oil companies on the planet and he has to deliver a decision to phase out fossil fuels and phase in renewable energy in line with 1.5 degrees as President of COP28. After his latest letters we have reasons for even bigger concerns and challenge the COP28 President to get behind a decision to rapidly phase out fossil fuels and phase in renewable energy instead of speaking of pledges and technologies like CCS we know won’t deliver in the foreseeable future,” wrote Andreas Sieber, Associate Director, Campaigns and Policy, 350.org

“The COP28 president has a unique power and responsibility to conduct impartial negotiations that prioritize the needs of people worldwide over the interest of the fossil fuel industry. The success of COP28 will be judged by whether countries formally agree to end fossil fuel expansion and build a just and equitable phase-out of all fossil fuels, enabled by providing the necessary funding to triple renewable energy and doubling energy efficiency. We urge the COP28 Presidency to focus on achieving that outcome instead of expanding scarce diplomatic time and capital to promoting voluntary pledges and initiatives that at best can become distractions from the main negotiations and might end up greenwashing the fossil fuel industry’s bet on climate failure,” added Romain Ioualalen, Manager, Global Policy, Oil Change International.


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SDGs

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15% SDGs on track due to climate change and extreme weather

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Halfway through meeting the 2030 Agenda for climate goals, the world is nowhere closer to meeting the objective. Climate change is causing global extreme weather events, with record temperatures causing global damage.

A new United in Science report by the World Meteorological Organization indicates that only 15% of the Sustainable Development Goals are on track due to climate change and extreme weather. According to the report, the 2030 Agenda’s half-time point indicates the planet is far from meeting its climate goals, hindering global efforts to address hunger, poverty, ill health, and improve access to clean water and energy.

The authors highlight the potential of weather, climate, and water sciences to enhance food and water security, clean energy, health, sustainable oceans, and resilient cities.

Data

Between 1970 and 2021, nearly 12,000 disasters resulting in over 2 million deaths and 4.3 trillion in economic losses occurred. Over 90% of these reported deaths and 60% of economic losses occurred in developing economies, undermining sustainable development. Rising global temperatures and extreme weather conditions are causing a 66% chance of global near-surface temperatures exceeding 1.5°C.

Fossil fuel CO2 emissions increased by 1% globally in 2022 compared to 2021 and preliminary estimates from January-June 2023 show a further 0.3% rise, the authors noted in the report. The Paris Agreement’s temperature goal requires a 30% and 45% reduction in global greenhouse gas emissions by 2030, with CO2 emissions close to net zero by 2050.

On the other hand, the report highlights the benefits of weather predictions, integrating epidemiology and climate information, and early-warning systems in boosting food production, reducing poverty, and preventing climate-sensitive diseases.

Require real-time forecasting

For example, how weather predictions help boost food production and move closer to zero hunger. Integrating epidemiology and climate information helps understand and anticipate those diseases sensitive to climate. And early-warning systems help to reduce poverty by giving people the chance to prepare and limit the impact.

UN Secretary-General António Guterres warns that the global response is inadequate, and science is crucial for solutions. He emphasizes the importance of weather, climate, and water-related sciences in achieving the Sustainable Development Goals.

WMO Secretary-General Prof. Petteri Taalas emphasizes the science community’s unity in achieving the SDGs, highlighting the potential of groundbreaking technologies like climate modelling and AI to transform and safeguard sustainable development.

“The science continues to show that we are not doing enough to lower emissions and meet the goals of the Paris Agreement – as the world prepares for the first global stocktake at COP28, we must increase our ambition and action, and we must all do the real work to transform our economies through a just transition to a sustainable future for people and planet,” said Inger Andersen, Executive Director of the UN Environment Program.


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