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Thursday, September 19, 2024

Carbon Seize Is Largely An Oil & Gasoline Business Shell Sport — Masala Flavored


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The most recent installment of the continued seminar collection on world decarbonization that I’m main for India’s utility professionals below the auspices of the India Good Grid Discussion board was on carbon seize and sequestration (CCS). It’s an excessively hyped, overly hoped for answer that isn’t and gained’t scale remotely economically. If you find yourself on the backside of a gap digging, the primary answer is to cease digging, to not have teaspoons of filth thrown into the outlet by another person. Transcript, slides, and embedded webinar are right here for individuals who prefer to listen-listen or read-read.

Reji Kumar Pillai (RKP): Good morning, good afternoon, good night. Heat welcome to all of the individuals. Thanks for becoming a member of the final webinar. I obtained caught in some ministry I couldn’t be part of at first to average. So at the moment, regardless of different engagements, I made certain I’m proper in entrance. This can be a topic which we’re going to discuss at the moment, present carbon seize. This can be a topic which has not made a lot of growth or it has gone at scale within the final a number of a long time. Personally, in my younger days as a coaching engineer within the early eighties, I had the chance to attend a couple of workshops which have been offered to the NDPC Nationwide Thermal Energy Company. So some specialists from abroad got here they usually offered that each one the NDPC thermal energy crops ought to set up CC as we used to name these days.

Carbon seize and sequestration utilization was not there within the eighties. So that’s, CCS grew to become CC us solely within the final ten years. So totally different corporations, totally different boards, totally different settings. We’ve been seeing this expertise, but it surely has not made the way in which many different applied sciences which have progressed within the final 4 a long time. We aren’t seeing that type of progress right here. And one of many predominant cause India why this went very sluggish is as a result of or no person have been very lengthy on it is because we use coal which is for thermal energy stations and plenty of different fossil gasoline trade. We use coal which has a really excessive sulfur content material. So earlier than the 2 or three CCS applied sciences which have been tried out or piloted that must have the sulfur content material of the coal should be decreased.

So what they’ve been doing, put in a desulfurization unit within the movement gasoline which comes out of the boiler desulfurization unit after which taking the movement gases to the carbon seize unit. So which makes the entire thing very costly and unviable. I’m certain no different expertise which has come the place the Indian coal might undergo and immediately into carbon seize and it may be tried. So we’ll hear extra about it. Why this isn’t a expertise which goes to assist in decarbonization, the web zero journey of any of the nations. This expertise shouldn’t be more likely to assist in the following 2030 years. So regardless of that, a number of billions of {dollars} of investor cash is flowing into startups who’re claiming that they’ve options, however I’ve not seen any which has been carried out at scale.

So with out taking any extra time, I’ll hand it over to Michael who will take us by way of a presentation. Thanks Michael, over to you.

Slide from ISGF India utility professionals seminar on carbon capture led by Michael Barnard, Chief Strategist, TFIE Strategy Inc.
Slide from ISGF India utility professionals seminar on carbon seize led by Michael Barnard, Chief Strategist, TFIE Technique Inc.

Michael Barnard (MB): Thanks Reji, and thanks as at all times to the ISGF for giving me the privilege of offering my context to the good nation of India because it makes an attempt to maneuver ahead into an prosperous and low carbon future. It’s a tough path to string, however it’s attainable to Reji’s level concerning tacking carbon seize onto complete technology crops, I’ll contact on that later. It’s not simply sulfur, is all I’ll say at this level. So I at all times like to begin with the context for this. Proper now, we’ve got about 3000 billion tons of carbon dioxide, metric tons of carbon dioxide in our environment, and we’ve added about 1000 billion tons because the starting of the economic revolution. Used to solely be about 2000 billion tons. We’re including between 35 and 41 billion tons yearly. That’s simply our annual.

It’s a number of carbon dioxide that we’re including. Now. From the utilization perspective, at present we’re solely utilizing 230 million tons, or below 0.6% of the annual advert in carbon dioxide as an industrial feedstock globally. It’s utilized in greenhouses, it’s utilized in Pepsi Cola and stuff like that. And that’s the invisible dot. The dimensions of our whole utilization is so small it doesn’t even register in comparison with the size of the issue we’ve created. And in order that’s basic assertion primary. It’s an enormous drawback by way of portions, and we’re including to that drawback yearly in very big methods. Our whole marketplace for carbon dioxide is a rounding error in comparison with that.

Now the opposite factor to know concerning the rounding error is that 90 million of these 230 million tons are used for enhanced oil restoration, largely in the US, though each China and India now discover are doing a little enhanced oil restoration methods as effectively. In order that 230 million tons, you need to type of truly say it’s solely 140 million tons of carbon dioxide. That’s truly obtained to make use of at the moment. We’re not going to scale 140 million tons a number of instances to make it and discover extra makes use of for carbon dioxide that make that large enough to be materials. Materiality is a key idea on this, essentially, due to the size of the issue. We’ve to be speaking 100 million tons a 12 months for a specific answer to scale to to ensure that it to register as a part of the answer. So take into consideration these numbers.

Slide from ISGF India utility professionals seminar on carbon capture led by Michael Barnard, Chief Strategist, TFIE Strategy Inc.
Slide from ISGF India utility professionals seminar on carbon seize led by Michael Barnard, Chief Strategist, TFIE Technique Inc.

I’m going to step into a couple of examples. We’ve obtained a bunch of case research in right here. Carbon engineering is among the large ones. It’s now being bought by what was once Occidental Petroleum. I did an enormous case examine on it a couple of years in the past. Its premise was that it was going to seize carbon dioxide from the environment and make artificial fuels. However to seize 1,000,000 tons, only one million tons, that’s a hundredth of materiality. It will require a wall of followers 2 km lengthy, 20 meters excessive, 3 meters thick, operating 24 7365, and burning pure gasoline to energy your entire factor. The one pure marketplace for it’s, oh, enhanced soil restoration. And that’s what Oxy, the rebranding, greenwashing rebranding of Occidental is utilizing it for. Within the Permian Basin in Texas.

It’s truly being constructed to suck CO2 out of the environment whereas burning unmarketable pure gasoline and put the carbon dioxide underground to extract extra oil from tapped out oil reservoirs. And when that oil is extracted and used as meant, it creates extra carbon dioxide. This can be a theme. It’s all a part of the shell sport of carbon seize and sequestration. And famous that. I’ll simply refer again to 1 key phrase within the title, largely a shell sport.

Slide from ISGF India utility professionals seminar on carbon capture led by Michael Barnard, Chief Strategist, TFIE Strategy Inc.
Slide from ISGF India utility professionals seminar on carbon seize led by Michael Barnard, Chief Strategist, TFIE Technique Inc.

I’ll provide you with one other instance. Climeworks will get a number of consideration. It’s up in Iceland and it’s being expanded. It’s being doubled in dimension this 12 months. That’s going to handle 40,000. That’s 1000’s, not tens of millions, not lots of of tens of millions. Definitely not a billion tons of carbon dioxide removing yearly at what’s estimated to be about $1,000 us {dollars} per ton.

So it’s extremely costly carbon dioxide removing that isn’t scaling and gained’t scale at that value, at that price level. And to be clear, there’s nothing within the expertise which signifies that it’s going to get cheaper. It’s not one thing like batteries, it’s not one thing like cell telephones. It’s not one thing like home equipment the place billions of persons are going to purchase them in a number of portions to drive economies of scale. It’s an enormous industrial facility, and the chemistry shouldn’t be going to get magically higher. In order that’s sufficient about air carbon seize. However I wish to discuss ocean carbon seize, as a result of the ocean absorbs a number of the carbon dioxide from the environment. And that’s usually okay when we’ve got the carbon dioxide cycle in stability, besides that we don’t have the carbon dioxide cycle in stability.

Slide from ISGF India utility professionals seminar on carbon capture led by Michael Barnard, Chief Strategist, TFIE Strategy Inc.
Slide from ISGF India utility professionals seminar on carbon seize led by Michael Barnard, Chief Strategist, TFIE Technique Inc.

So now what’s occurring is one thing that’s known as ocean acidification. Ocean acidification is greatest understood as lowering the alkalinity of the ocean. It’s a reasonably alkaline water substance as a result of it’s obtained a number of salt in it. The problem is totally different, although. The problem is that carbonate ions are free floating ions that include a few of the carbon dioxide, they usually’re floating within the ocean. They get utilized by shellfish to make their shells. They bind them into calcium carbonate shells to make their oyster shells and clam shells. However when carbon dioxide enters the water, it combines with water, and it turns into carbonic acid. After which it binds with the carbonate ion, after which it turns into bicarbonate ions. Now, bicarbonate ions take one carbon molecule from the water and one from the brand new CO2 from the environment to make two bicarbonate ions.

And shellfish can’t use bicarbonate ions. So once we discuss ocean acidification, it’s making shellfish shells brittle as a result of they don’t have the mandatory carbonate ions. It’s a basic factor. Now, the second factor that occurs once we do that is the extra CO2 enters that ocean, the extra it will get saturated. And the much less CO2 might be added to the ocean, the much less can be absorbed. So the ocean’s skill to soak up our extra diminishes. What this has led a bunch of individuals to say is, effectively, why don’t we improve the alkalinity of the ocean and due to this fact improve the CO2 uptake and scale back the warming drawback? However including extra CO2 to the ocean simply makes extra bicarbonate ions and removes extra skill for the shellfish to do their stuff. You’d suppose folks would see this. Nevertheless, numerous persons are attempting various issues.

Slide from ISGF India utility professionals seminar on carbon capture led by Michael Barnard, Chief Strategist, TFIE Strategy Inc.
Slide from ISGF India utility professionals seminar on carbon seize led by Michael Barnard, Chief Strategist, TFIE Technique Inc.

There’s a Canadian firm referred to as Planetary Engineering. They took analysis from a California PhD who’s been finding out this for 30 years. All that is well-known chemistry. All that is well-known biology. All that is effectively researched pathways. And so, you realize, startups who’re claiming they’ve invented one thing new are most likely simply pretending they invented one thing new as a result of there’s already educational literature on it. What planetary engineering did, and based mostly upon the work of this folks, is that they stated, let’s use milk of magnesia magnesium hydroxide, and we’ll pour it into the ocean, and it’ll bind with the CO2 to make magnesium carbonates as a substitute and improve the alkalinity of the water and improve the CO2 uptake. This truly works. I’m not saying the expertise and the chemical course of doesn’t work.

The issue is manufacturing magnesium hydroxide is de facto costly, so it finally ends up being actually costly, like thousand or extra {dollars} per ton of extra carbon dioxide eliminated. And secondarily, magnesium hydroxide manufacturing has a carbon debt larger than the added ocean carbon drawdown. So these numbers aren’t exhausting to determine. And but this answer gained the x prize for carbon drawdown. It gained 1,000,000 {dollars} US from that initiative from the X Prize basis and Elon Musk. It arrange two pilot crops, and solely after it arrange two pilot crops did it type of notice it was too expensive and it had a excessive carbon debt. In order that they’re truly attempting to pivot now, but it surely’s par for the course. They simply aren’t doing the essential techno financial assessments, and persons are throwing cash at these options that aren’t options.

Slide from ISGF India utility professionals seminar on carbon capture led by Michael Barnard, Chief Strategist, TFIE Strategy Inc.
Slide from ISGF India utility professionals seminar on carbon seize led by Michael Barnard, Chief Strategist, TFIE Technique Inc.

Captura is a bit higher. It’s an electrolysis based mostly answer. Brings up tons of ocean water up out of the ocean into an industrial plant, like a desalination plant, and makes use of, splits a little bit of it off, electrolyzes it to make it extra acidic, after which provides it again to the seawater. After which that unlocks the carbonate ions, bicarbonate ions, after which that bubbles out as CO2. They separate the CO2, they usually pump every part else again into the water. And in order that sounds nice, and it really works, besides you truly should raise 10,000 tons, 5 meters to get one ton of carbon dioxide. So the power necessities are literally fairly excessive. That 5 meters is simply mainly the tide. You’re going to have to truly get this into an industrial facility by the ocean, like a desalination plant. That requires transferring seawater uphill.

Secondarily, you’re truly stripping the carbonate ions that shellfish want out as effectively. It’s simply a kind of issues the place they don’t have a biologist on workers, they aren’t trying on the downstream implications. And albeit, Captura is one of the best of the bunch so far as oceanic enhancement of carbon drawdown goes, and it’s not that nice. So there’s one other matter that’s price speaking about in carbon seize and sequestration, which is that we’ve got to maneuver the carbon dioxide locations. The explanation for that’s as a result of locations to place carbon dioxide underground completely in sequestration aren’t actually anyplace close to the place we generate carbon dioxide. Our coal crops aren’t beside good geographical sequestration factors.

Slide from ISGF India utility professionals seminar on carbon capture led by Michael Barnard, Chief Strategist, TFIE Strategy Inc.
Slide from ISGF India utility professionals seminar on carbon seize led by Michael Barnard, Chief Strategist, TFIE Technique Inc.

Our main industries that manufacture, like our refineries, that make a number of carbon dioxide, effectively, they’re concentrated industries, however the locations the place it’s good to place carbon dioxide underground are distributed, and which means we’d like pipelines. We’d like the bottom price mechanism for transferring carbon dioxide round. On this context, Europe asserts that they’ll want about 19,000 pipelines that don’t exist at the moment. By the way in which, that is all costly new infrastructure. So in Mississippi, in Satarshu, Mississippi, a village of 46 folks. That’s proper, 4, six. In 2020, they’d a carbon dioxide pipeline operating previous their village, 1.6 km away. Why was there a CO2 pipeline there? Properly, as a result of it was carrying liquid CO2 to an enhanced oil restoration subject. But once more, enhanced oil restoration rears its ugly head.

The issue was that there was some extra precipitation within the space. The land slipped, the pipeline separated. A pipeline separating is often not an enormous deal. Excuse me, I’m simply going to get a glass of water. The pipeline separated, after which the liquid CO2. The liquid CO2 was gaseous CO2. The gaseous CO2 expanded. The gaseous CO2 expanded 590 instances the quantity of the liquid CO2. Usually, this might be okay as a result of, effectively, it’s gasoline, so that you’d count on it to only dissipate within the environment. However carbon dioxide is heavier than nitrogen and oxygen. It doesn’t dissipate robotically. It doesn’t simply dissipate instantly. It kinds a blanket on the bottom that’s 10 meters thick and rolls downhill and fills pockets. And it rolled downhill into Satartia, Mississippi, 1.6 km away.

It rolled throughout a freeway that was between the pipeline and the village. Folks in a relaxation cease on the freeway of their automotive, simply taking a break from driving, have been left unconscious and gasping for air as a result of they’ll’t breathe. Carbon dioxide vehicles wouldn’t work in Satartia; the general public who lived within the city have been left unconscious on the bottom. Over 200 folks have been evacuated. Emergency autos couldn’t get into the city hours after the occasion. Inside rooms, inside buildings. In Satarsha, elevated ranges of 30,000 components per million have been recorded inside these buildings, which is, by the way in which, life threatening. It’s an asphyxiant. And so what does a small village in a distant a part of an underpopulated state in the US should do with carbon seize sequestration constructed massive?

Properly, the pipeline plans in something which makes use of carbon seize and sequestration and scale, should put pipelines by way of closely populated components of our nations, as a result of that’s the place we generate a number of carbon dioxide, and it has to undergo these components to get to locations the place there’s offshore or undersea stuff. If we take a look at this map, up right here within the Rotterdam space within the North Sea is the place they count on to place a number of carbon dioxide underground in sequestration services. And it is a very closely populated a part of Europe. The darker parts of the map are inhabitants density. I created this simply to overlay the pipeline infrastructure over the inhabitants density map for Europe to provide a way of it is a important threat. And there are some mitigations.

You’ll be able to put gaseous CO2 pipelines by way of populated areas, for instance, however gaseous CO2 is sort of 600 instances the quantity, and so you may put quite a bit much less by way of a a lot larger pipe, so it’s much more costly. So public security hasn’t been arising in these, but it surely wants to carry on.

Slide from ISGF India utility professionals seminar on carbon capture led by Michael Barnard, Chief Strategist, TFIE Strategy Inc.
Slide from ISGF India utility professionals seminar on carbon seize led by Michael Barnard, Chief Strategist, TFIE Technique Inc.

One other instance, Sleipnir within the North Sea is usually touted by Equinor as a tremendous carbon sequestration facility. However it’s taking carbon dioxide blended with pure gasoline from below the North Sea, lifting it to the floor, separating the CO2 out as a result of there’s an excessive amount of of it, and placing it again underground for tax breaks. This isn’t CO2 sequestration. That is simply cleansing up after a multitude we’re making a bit bit. They usually’ve made about €1.2 billion of tax breaks the final time I checked for this.

Slide from ISGF India utility professionals seminar on carbon capture led by Michael Barnard, Chief Strategist, TFIE Strategy Inc.
Slide from ISGF India utility professionals seminar on carbon seize led by Michael Barnard, Chief Strategist, TFIE Technique Inc.

One other piece of the shell sport query is again to placing bolting carbon seize onto energy technology. There’s a few examples right here. Boundary Dam in Saskatchewan and Petronova coal technology within the southern United States each tried this. They each bolted carbon seize onto coal technology crops. Within the case of Petronova, they’d eight boilers within the coal plant. They put carbon seize onto considered one of them. The parasitic energy draw of the carbon seize expertise was so nice, they needed to construct a gasoline plant to energy it, as a result of in any other case they couldn’t meet their coal crops contractual obligations to ship energy to prospects. When you need to construct a gasoline plant to energy a full plant’s carbon sequestration, you realize one thing’s not fairly proper. Each in Petronova and Boundary Dam, they have been considerably profitable in capturing carbon in CO2.

It’s not rocket science, however the fee was a lot that though each have been used for enhanced oil restoration enhancement and have been getting paid for the carbon dioxide, they have been capturing and getting governmental subsidies, neither of them was remotely economically viable. In Boundary Dam, it’s $140 per megawatt hour, because the wholesale value of electrical energy. And the federal government of Saskatchewan stated, effectively, now that we’ve carried out this, we’re by no means going to do it once more, as a result of it’s simply approach too costly. Petronova, the carbon seize neighborhood, claims it’s successful. However from the surface, it’s efficiently confirmed the expertise can work, however not remotely, that it’s remotely viable, economically or scalable. Keep in mind, one boiler of eight in a single plant, they usually needed to construct a gasoline plant to energy it. The EOR half is the shell sport half.

And nothing exemplifies the shell sport of carbon seize greater than ExxonMobil’s Shute Creek facility. What they do in ShuteCreek is that they take pure gasoline from underground, similar to within the Sliepnir facility, and it has an excessive amount of carbon dioxide. In order that they strip off the carbon dioxide, after which they pipe it a couple of hundred kilometers to locations that want carbon dioxide for enhanced oil restoration, they usually shove it underground. In order that they’ve taken carbon dioxide out from one place, put it in a pipeline to a different place. They’re shoving underground in that different place to do extra enhanced oil restoration, to get extra oil out, to burn the oil, to make extra carbon dioxide. They usually declare advantage for this. However right here’s the opposite factor. In the event that they don’t even have a buyer for the carbon dioxide, they simply vent it to the environment.

In order that they’re truly making quite a bit, venting a number of carbon dioxide to the environment on the Shute Creek facility and promoting a few of it for enhanced oil restoration. This isn’t a virtuous story or remotely a local weather answer. But ExxonMobil claims that they’re essentially the most, they’ve essentially the most subtle and best quantity of carbon seize and sequestration of any facility on the earth. It’s only a declare that doesn’t stand as much as scrutiny.

Slide from ISGF India utility professionals seminar on carbon capture led by Michael Barnard, Chief Strategist, TFIE Strategy Inc.
Slide from ISGF India utility professionals seminar on carbon seize led by Michael Barnard, Chief Strategist, TFIE Technique Inc.

Now, additionally, a couple of years in the past, three or 4 years in the past, I checked out each carbon seize and sequestration facility globally that was sequestering no less than 1,000,000 tons of carbon dioxide a 12 months. Keep in mind, 100 million tons is materials. 1,000,000 tons shouldn’t be materials. However these have been those that have been no less than over 1,000,000 tons.

So we might no less than discuss them with out, like, Climeworks questioning why anyone was speaking about them in any respect. And what I did is I went again to 1972, when the primary of those efforts have been constructed, and I went by way of time, and I captured the capital prices of those. Not the working prices, simply the capital prices. And I then stated, okay, at the moment, how a lot did wind and photo voltaic price? After which I did math to determine how a lot wind and photo voltaic we might have constructed by way of that point. After which I discovered which of them have been enhanced oil restoration, nearly all of them. And gave them each advantage of the doubt that they’d truly sequester some internet carbon, though they’re doing enhanced oil restoration.

And what I discovered was that we’d have, even when we gave them each advantage of the doubt, simply constructing wind and photo voltaic would have prevented much more carbon dioxide being emitted than any of them sequestered, than the entire of them sequestered over these a long time. And it is a basic factor that it boils all the way down to for carbon seize. Carbon seize. The perfect factor we are able to do once we’re in a gap is cease digging the outlet. Carbon seize is a teaspoon, taking a bit little bit of filth out of the pile beside the outlet and placing it again into the outlet, whereas we proceed to make use of the large entrance finish loader to scoop buckets of soil out of the outlet.

Wind and photo voltaic renewable technology avoids digging the outlet, and it’s a lot less expensive than attempting to take carbon dioxide out of the air or seize it from coal crops or different issues. It’s the most affordable approach to scale back the carbon dioxide coming into our environment. Now, that doesn’t imply we don’t should do some stuff, and that doesn’t imply there aren’t locations for carbon seize.

Slide from ISGF India utility professionals seminar on carbon capture led by Michael Barnard, Chief Strategist, TFIE Strategy Inc.
Slide from ISGF India utility professionals seminar on carbon seize led by Michael Barnard, Chief Strategist, TFIE Technique Inc.

Slightly little bit of foregrounding. The following and final seminar on this collection can be on hydrogen, which is being vastly hyped. That is my considerably heterodox projection for hydrogen demand by way of 2100. Sharp eyes, not even significantly sharp eyes, will notice that demand goes to go down. I’ll get into the reasons for all that in a few weeks. However this will get to blue hydrogen, which is an enormous place the place carbon seize is promoted.

Blue hydrogen is mainly simply grey or black hydrogen, which we take coal or gasoline, and we use reformation applied sciences to separate out the carbon from hydrogen, the carbon will get bonded with oxygen from the environment to make carbon dioxide. And theoretically, we use hydrogen for stuff. Properly, hydrogen is a carbon dioxide drawback at the moment. For this reason carbon dioxide, or hydrogen at the moment, is a world warming drawback on the size of all aviation. I’ll simply repeat that. We’ve a lot carbon dioxide popping out of producing hydrogen at the moment that it’s on the similar scale as all of aviation all over the place on the earth. It’s a local weather drawback greater than a local weather answer.

The premise of the oil and gasoline trade is what they’ll do is that they’ll take their hydrocarbons, they’ll reform them, however they’ll bolt on that costly power sucking carbon seize answer onto the reformation crops, after which they are going to put the carbon dioxide someplace. They usually’re asking governments for some huge cash for this. Which may occur, but it surely, as soon as once more, will get again to that drawback of price and scale, and it does considerably improve the price of that blue hydrogen and to the purpose the place it turns into an actual query mark by way of techno economics for transportation and different finish use circumstances. However there’s going to be some blue hydrogen.

Slide from ISGF India utility professionals seminar on carbon capture led by Michael Barnard, Chief Strategist, TFIE Strategy Inc.
Slide from ISGF India utility professionals seminar on carbon seize led by Michael Barnard, Chief Strategist, TFIE Technique Inc.

Cement is one other place. Cement is an enormous carbon drawback, an enormous carbon dioxide drawback. I like to consider limestone, what we make Portland cement from, as type of that different fossil gasoline, as a result of limestone has obtained carbonous and oxygen certain with calcium. After which we warmth it as much as about 900 levels celsius and bakes off the carbon dioxide and leaves behind fast line, you realize, a calcium oxide, the calcium oxide we mix with clays, and we rotate them in a drum with extra warmth and a few silicates, and we make Portland cement nodules, mainly a bit ceramic, and we crush that. We make buildings out of it. However earlier this 12 months, I lastly obtained round to doing my cement decarbonization projection by way of 2100, how we’re going to do it. And there’s a bunch of stuff in there. I’ll simply foreground a couple of of the large ones. An enormous one is declining demand.

This projection of demand goes down for a couple of causes. One in all them is China’s completed its main infrastructure buildup. So the iron and metal it’s been hammering into the five hundred cities it’s constructed, the 177,000 km of highways it’s constructed. The web, at present round 45,000 km of excessive pace electrified rail. They’ve solely obtained about 7,000 to go earlier than they’re completed of their projections. All these issues they’ve constructed, effectively, they’re slowing down on their constructing and so which means demand for cement goes to go down. Then we’ve got cross laminated timber or engineered timber or mass timber, varied phrases for a similar factor, which can do it.

After which simply reusing buildings as a result of we’re going to have a declining constructing inventory, we’re going to have a inhabitants which achieves is, you realize, we’re going to have peak inhabitants between 2050 and 2070. And at a sure level we simply don’t want extra buildings as a result of we’re not, you realize, making extra folks. And so we are able to begin reusing buildings extra. So these are declines. However this is among the few locations the place carbon seize on a conventional or fashionable cement plant may make sense. It should pencil out economically. I did the fee assessments for this. Mainly, when you’ve got a cement plant that occurs to be geographically proper subsequent to, you realize, inside 100 geological formation, which is appropriate for long run sequestration of carbon dioxide, it most likely pencils out to only make cement and put carbon seize on that plant.

Now there’s some extra electrochemical applied sciences like Chic’s, which might make this a bit higher, however carbon seize truly may make sense in cement. It’s one of many few locations the place it’ll most likely pencil out.

Slide from ISGF India utility professionals seminar on carbon capture led by Michael Barnard, Chief Strategist, TFIE Strategy Inc.
Slide from ISGF India utility professionals seminar on carbon seize led by Michael Barnard, Chief Strategist, TFIE Technique Inc.

So there are some locations, but it surely will get again to that thousand billion additional tons of carbon dioxide in our environment. And what are we going to do about that? Properly, we’ve type of checked out this and the IPCC six has an inventory of six main carbon drawdown approaches. The six main carbon drawdown approaches are nature. Nature, nature, nature. And on the sixth, one closely lobbied for by the oil and gasoline trade and nations which have numerous oil and gasoline. Oh, mechanical and industrial carbon seize drawdown strategies, type of these ones of bolting on carbon seize to fossil gasoline technology methods.

In order we glance throughout nations, what we discover is nations that don’t have main oil and gasoline industries don’t, aren’t relying on their insurance policies for carbon drawdown from geological sequestration of carbon dioxide. They’ve saline reservoirs which can be appropriate for carbon sequestration underground. However they’re simply saying this doesn’t make sense. It solely is smart to the folks, to the nations which have already got main oil and gasoline industries, which rely on carbon seize being a mechanical carbon seize of fossil gasoline emissions being a factor sooner or later. And so simply type of like to take a seat there and suppose and say, effectively, what might we do as a substitute? In India, after all, you’ve obtained important mangrove forest, shoreline, deforestation challenges. Renewing these would radically improve your carbon drawdown emissions and stuff like that.

It’s not a slam dunk and it’s not actually not going to assist us by 2050. However carbon drawdown is greatest considered one thing for 2200. The quantity of CO2 within the environment goes to maintain paying destructive dividends for hundreds of years. And so we’ve got to slowly draw it all the way down to most likely round 300 components per million. Nature is the way in which to do this. It’s the one scalable, robotically replicable, cheap approach to do it. And so we’ve got to alter our land practices and a bunch of different stuff. And that’s it for my presentation. We’ve a while for dialog.

Slide from ISGF India utility professionals seminar on carbon capture led by Michael Barnard, Chief Strategist, TFIE Strategy Inc.
Slide from ISGF India utility professionals seminar on carbon seize led by Michael Barnard, Chief Strategist, TFIE Technique Inc.

RKP: See if there are any questions.

Sanjeev: I can do one verbally when you don’t thoughts. That is Sanjeev. Reji. So Michael, I used to be simply questioning whenever you take a look at your situations the place demand for cement would go down as a result of China’s every part that they wanted to, you’re type of ignoring what India may be as much as over the following 2040 years or so. As a result of admittedly we don’t have an important historical past of development. But when issues perk up, then India may very well be in a approach the following China so far as demand is worried, plus some extra. However you don’t issue that into your chart. So I used to be questioning why.

MB: Oh, you’re incorrect. I do think about it, I simply didn’t point out it. Usually after I discuss my projections by way of 2100, what I assert is the extremely fast development and infrastructure construct out that China drove itself by way of over the previous 45 years is unprecedented globally and won’t be repeated at that charge or scale by the rising nations of India, Brazil or India. Their development can be sooner than it has been traditionally, but it surely gained’t be at that scale. Additional, they don’t seem to be pursuing industrialization insurance policies which can be something on the size or magnitude of China. And so whereas their demand will improve, it will likely be greater than offset by the size of China. Each time I do the mathematics on China, what I discover is like for instance, let’s simply take metal. I’ve obtained a metal projection by way of 2100 as effectively.

China manufactured in 2020 half of all of the metal on the earth. The following greatest producer was India and it was a tenth the dimensions. India doubling its metal manufacturing as a part of the, you realize, its development course of over the following 20 years, that’s a large development for India, nonetheless solely replaces a tenth of China’s complete output, and China’s most likely going to decrease by 50% right into a upkeep cycle over that interval. What I take a look at by way of this stuff is the doubtless development patterns China has. When it liberalized its financial system within the Nineteen Eighties, India began doing a little export, but it surely didn’t essentially create practically as important export markets for its industrial manufactured merchandise because it did for different merchandise and for its companies.

Having labored within the world tech trade, I’ve been working with Indian groups with Tata and different companies by way of IBM for many years. And so the mental exports that China was that India was doing are very low carbon in comparison with the washers, dryers, ships, exports of different treats. I additionally labored in Brazil and their exports are closely useful resource extraction based mostly, dominated by each minerals and agricultural merchandise, bulk merchandise there. And they don’t seem to be constructing the economic base for export that China did as effectively. Equally, Indonesia is doing a bunch of attention-grabbing stuff, but it surely’s not constructing that industrial base. And due to the way in which our economies are structured, we’re not going to see that scale of construct out once more. India is already a reasonably urbanized nation. It’s not as closely urbanized as it will likely be. It nonetheless must do a number of city growth.

However China got here out of the Mao interval with all people being thrown out of cities to be rice farmers at a very counterproductive tempo. And the cities rotted and fell aside. They needed to construct 500 cities from scratch. I don’t see the remainder of the world constructing 500 cities from scratch within the subsequent 40 years. So I hope that solutions your query. It’s thought of. I forgot to say it after I was articulating China’s drawdown.

Sanjeev: Thanks. Thanks.

MB: We’ve a query within the textual content. So what are the fabric challenges in carbon dioxide transportation? Properly, the primary materials problem is that once we burn any fossil gasoline, we get two to a few instances the mass of carbon dioxide. So it’s like when you ordered some meals for takeout, for supply, and the man got here, the supply particular person got here on their electrical bike to your door and handed you a bag, after which whenever you opened the bag and ate the meals, you had 3 times as a lot leftovers and that you simply couldn’t eat because the meals that you simply ate. That’s what the issue is with burning fossil fuels. Carbon within the fossil gasoline combines with oxygen from the environment to triple its mass.

And it not solely triples the mass, when you burn coal or oil, effectively, they’re liquids and solids, that are very dense types of carbon. However as we bind them, the carbon in them, with oxygen from the environment, effectively, that’s a gasoline. And as soon as once more, it’s very diffuse. So not solely is the mass a a number of of the feedstock, however the quantity is multiples of the feedstock as effectively. It’s a waste stream. A hidden profit traditionally of fossil fuels is that once we burn them, a number of the waste, the largest by far, mass and quantity of waste, removes itself as a result of it simply goes into the environment and diffuses. That is primary science, but it surely’s invisible to us, so we don’t give it some thought. So let’s simply take a pure gasoline plant. A pure gasoline plant has a pipeline coming into it.

It burns a bunch of pure gasoline, after which for each ton of pure gasoline that is available in, three tons of a brand new gasoline get created. So which means we’ve got to construct a pipeline out of the plant that’s 3 times the dimensions. That takes 3 times the power to maneuver the gasoline. And so we find yourself with all kinds of prices and efforts related to that. Additional, once we’re placing that gasoline again underground, effectively, once we take oil out of a reservoir, for instance, effectively, that’s oil. It’s as soon as once more a dense type of carbon. However we’re placing a non dense type of carbon dioxide again underground, which is why a number of sequestration issues are utilizing supercritical CO2. They pump it down as that type of liquid stable or that liquid gasoline combination. That’s the supercritical section.

There’s a complete bunch of technical complexities that come up with that. It takes power to compress carbon dioxide to its liquid type. It takes power to maintain it compressed by way of a pipeline factor. Now, as soon as once more, these are all solvable issues technically, however they change into unviable economically, they usually usher in security issues. I’ll simply say that there isn’t a different trade the place the waste stream is 3 times the mass of the enter stream. It’s only a scale drawback. Different waste issues that we take care of. The waste is a fraction of the enter streams. In order that’s the basic drawback. There are not any technical issues that may’t be overcome with adequate cash, however that cash’s all going to be governmental, and it’s going to be governmental cash that’s going to persist for many years or centuries.

It’s significantly better to construct wind and photo voltaic and keep away from burning the CO2 within the first place. It’s significantly better to revive wetlands, grasslands, mangrove swamps, plant extra timber, modify our agricultural practices in order that they sequester as a substitute of releasing carbon dioxide than it’s for different stuff. I hope that solutions your query. Parvatula.

Parvatula: Okay. Pure supplies soak up CO2 slowly, however the charge at which decarbonization drive is deliberate will take longer. In case you persist with your steered method, going to nature alone won’t remedy the issue in close to time period. Please give your feedback completely true. Your entire premise of carbon drawdown to satisfy 2050 objectives is essentially flawed. Their carbon drawdown won’t deal with that.

MB: It’s being included as a result of the IPCC has been closely lobbied to incorporate carbon drawdown and since folks aren’t seeing the opposite levers that we are able to do. And it is a actually clear assertion of a conservative factor. So carbon drawdown is included within the IPC season areas as a result of they don’t know what else to do. That doesn’t imply it’s going to work. That doesn’t imply we are able to scale mechanical or nature based mostly options. Excuse me. Neither are going to scale quickly sufficient to resolve the issue. Fixing the issue requires a really accelerated charge of transformation of our power and transportation methods, our land use methods. To keep away from releasing much more CO2, we’ve got to do this in a really accelerated approach. Therefore the triple renewables by 2030.

Now, the excellent news right here is that filth low-cost photo voltaic panels, the glut of photo voltaic panels signifies that massively extra photo voltaic is being constructed within the developed and creating world. As we converse, wind power is continuous to develop. It’s simply being overshadowed by photo voltaic. Wind continues to be extremely low-cost, extremely dominant, and really quick. We’ve hydroelectric sources which can be untapped. As I discovered yesterday, there are 2,500 present dams in the US which aren’t getting used to generate electrical energy. They’re getting used as reservoirs for irrigation and stuff. And so we’ve got a major quantity of untapped hydro technology. We’ve all of the instruments at hand to radically scale back our carbon emissions. And the requirement there’s to be very critical about electrifying every part all over the place, .

China has electrified its financial system greater than the remainder, at a a lot sooner charge than the remainder of the world, as a result of it’s economically wise. They’re forward of the remainder of the world by way of electrification of their financial system. They’re forward of the remainder of the world by way of electrification and transportation, heating, cooling, all these applied sciences which can be vital to make use of electrical energy. They usually’re forward of the remainder of the world by way of deploying wind, photo voltaic, hydro, transmission and storage to ship power to these finish use circumstances. They’re forward of the world by way of industrial electrification. That’s the trail to comply with. Take a look at every part and say, how can we convert this to electrical energy? And the way can we massively improve our electrical supply to do that? We are able to do that.

Carbon drawdown shouldn’t be the reply to local weather change by 2050. It’s a pipe dream. It’s giving us the assumption {that a} maid will comply with us round, vacuum up, or. And sweep up our messes. I simply wish to say that’s unrealistic.


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