Shell Chief Seeks Carbon Capture Subsidies
BELGIUM: April 8, 2008
BRUSSELS - The European Union must create rapid incentives to promote
underground storage of carbon dioxide (CO2) to achieve its ambitious climate
change goals, the head of oil major Royal Dutch Shell said on Monday.
"Because CO2 capture and storage adds costs and yields no revenues,
government action is needed to support and stimulate investment quickly on a
scale large enough to affect global emissions," Shell CEO Jeroen van der
Veer said in a speech prepared for delivery in Brussels.
The quickest way to give utilities an incentive to invest in developing the
technology would be to give them credits in the EU's Emissions Trading
System for CO2 they capture and store, he said, according to extracts
released by Shell.
The European Commission has proposed legislation to encourage carbon capture
and storage (CCS), notably by helping fund the construction of a dozen
demonstration plants.
But van der Veer said that could come too late to achieve the EU's goal of
cutting CO2 emissions by at least 20 percent by 2020 from 1990 levels.
"At the very least, companies should earn carbon credits for the CO2 they
capture and store," he said.
Carbon capture and storage, designed to reduce CO2 emissions from large
industrial sites such as power plants, has yet to be proven to work on an
industrial scale.
The Commission's draft legislation will provide a legal and regulatory
framework to make geological storage of CO2 possible.
"Yet in the absence of an accompanying transitional EU funding mechanism to
incentivise private sector investment, large-scale CCS projects in Europe
are likely to be delayed," van der Veer said.
Some EU lawmakers argue that energy companies should be reinvesting part of
the windfall profits they have made from higher energy prices and from
receiving CO2 permits free under the current ETS system to fund investment
in carbon storage.
(reporting by Paul Taylor, editing by Margaret Orgill)
Story by Paul Taylor
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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