| Burying CO2 Vital In Climate Battle - IEA 
    
 FRANCE: May 23, 2008
 
 
 BRUSSELS - Finding ways of safely burying carbon dioxide could be the only 
    way of keeping greenhouse gas emissions below dangerous levels, the 
    International Energy Agency's chief economist said on Thursday.
 
 
 Carbon capture and storage (CCS) is seen by industry and some lawmakers as a 
    possible silver bullet in the fight against climate change as it could curb 
    growing emissions from coal plants.
 
 But it has never been tested on a commercial scale and it is strongly 
    opposed by some environmentalists, who argue it is unsafe, will not be ready 
    in time and could divert investment away from truly green sources of power.
 
 IEA Chief Economist Fatih Birol said CCS was the technological breakthrough 
    the world was looking for in the fight against global warming, and any 
    economic and technological challenges could be overcome with government 
    support.
 
 The EU says any warming of the climate by more than 2 degrees Celsius over 
    pre-industrial levels will bring more damaging heatwaves, storms, coastal 
    flooding and water shortages.
 
 The bloc has adopted ambitious targets to cut greenhouse gas emissions by a 
    fifth by 2020 from 1990 levels.
 
 However, a United Nations panel of scientists says that target will be hard 
    to achieve and that its best guess for temperature rises this century is 
    between 1.8 and 4 degrees Celsius.
 
 "What we need is a key technology, which is carbon capture and storage," 
    Birol told a briefing with Brussels think-tank the Lisbon Council.
 
 "This is a key technology that can take us to the 2 degrees if it is pushed 
    appropriately, at the appropriate time and appropriate conditions," he said.
 
 Carbon capture has become a contentious issue in recent weeks, with EU 
    lawmakers debating new CCS legislation in the European Parliament.
 
 Greenpeace issued a report earlier this month describing the technology as a 
    "false hope", but some other green groups including WWF see it as a vital 
    stop-gap.
 
 Birol added: "At the G8 meeting next month in Hokkaido in Japan, this will 
    be our message: If you are serious on the climate change issue, your 
    support, and the support of carbon capture and storage, will be your litmus 
    test."
 
 He also said the promotion of CCS would be a key part of the IEA's annual 
    report in November, which would include a recommendation that the UN-led 
    Kyoto scheme starts rewarding CCS in its clean development mechanism.
 
 Companies preparing CCS projects include StatoilHydro, E.ON , RWE, Scottish 
    & Southern Energy, Scottish Power, owned by Iberdrola, and a joint venture 
    between BP and Rio Tinto called Hydrogen Energy.
 
 (Reporting by Pete Harrison)
 
 
 Story by Pete Harrison
 
 
 REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
 
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