MaltaToday previous editions

MaltaToday 8 December 2021 MIDWEEK

Issue link: https://maltatoday.uberflip.com/i/1435908

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 12 of 15

13 maltatoday | WEDNESDAY • 8 DECEMBER 2021 OPINION Kian Mintz-Woo Kian Mintz-Woo is Lecturer in Philosophy, Environmental Research Institute, at University College Cork THE recent Glasgow climate pact com- mitted 197 countries to "phas[ing] down unabated coal". Unabated coal refers to when power stations or factories burn coal without capturing and storing the carbon dioxide (CO₂) generated. Because the world has made such little progress in eliminating coal, oil and fossil gas, climate modellers foresee some use of carbon capture and storage as necessary to reach zero emissions in enough time to avert catastrophic warming. The technol- ogy to capture carbon is in development, but one burning question remains: where on Earth should we store all that carbon? Different methods of carbon capture will take place at different sites. Some in- volve absorbing emissions immediately after burning fossil fuels in chimneys and smokestacks where the CO₂ is highly con- centrated. Other methods capture carbon directly from the air, either by using chem- ical reactions that bind the carbon using lots of energy or by growing carbon-hun- gry plants which can be burned for energy and the resulting emissions subsequently captured. In new research, myself and environmen- tal engineer Joe Lane at Princeton Univer- sity in the US argued that, regardless of the method, leaving decisions about where to store carbon to commercial entities would mean avoiding an important moral dilem- ma. Funding for carbon capture and storage is insufficient. At the current rate of de- ployment, 700 million tonnes of CO₂ stor- age capacity will be added by 2050 – 10% of what is required. Countries would have to massively ramp up investment to be compliant with the Paris aqgreement's target of limiting glob- al warming to 1.5°C. Some of this money would be public funding, and people would reasonably expect it to fund projects which are morally sound. On the one hand, it might be deemed important to develop storage sites with the best prospects for storing lots of green- house gas for the longest duration. This argument maintains that the most impor- tant consideration for deploying carbon capture and storage is making the largest possible contribution to arresting climate change. To give carbon storage sites the greatest chance of success, it makes sense to devel- op them in places where the geology has been thoroughly explored and where there is lots of relevant expertise. This would imply pumping carbon into underground storage sites in northern Europe, the Mid- dle East and the US, where companies have spent centuries looking for and extracting fossil fuels. Storing carbon is roughly the reverse of extracting it from the ground, and there is an opportunity for workers in the oil and gas industry to lend their skills and expertise to this endeavour. On the other hand, it might be impor- tant to develop storage sites in economies where the current and future demand for carbon capture and storage is greatest. These competing aims pull in different di- rections. The regions with the best pros- pects are not often those with the greatest expected need. Developing storage sites in economies where expected demand for carbon cap- ture is highest overwhelmingly favours developing regions of Asia. In India and China, for instance, coal power stations and cement plants are expensive to de- commission and will need lots of carbon capture and storage capacity to decarbon- ise. If developing regions are expected to decarbonise without sufficient support to roll out carbon capture and storage, it could mean they have to throttle develop- ment to reduce emissions. There are no easy answers in this debate. Increasing carbon capture and storage ca- pacity as quickly as possible could benefit future generations by reducing the severity of climate change. So, you could argue that developing the most promising sites in Europe is the best way forward. But direct- ing investment for storage facilities from wealthy countries to developing regions could help address the debt the former owes the latter for causing the brunt of the climate crisis. World leaders should recognise this moral dilemma and consider the choices with urgency. The need to remove and safely store carbon becomes more severe by the day. Given the time and costs in- volved in developing storage sites, and the real possibility that the storage sites may not be sufficient for the carbon countries emit, this is a question which cannot be delayed. Carbon capture and storage: where should the world store CO 2 ? It's a moral dilemma Boundary Dam power station in Saskatchewan, Canada, claims to be the world's first coal plant with incorporated carbon capture and storage

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of MaltaToday previous editions - MaltaToday 8 December 2021 MIDWEEK