Federal Task Force Sends Recommendations to President
on Fostering Clean Coal Technology
DOE Fossil Energy NEWSALERT - August 12, 2010
President Obama’s Interagency Task Force on Carbon Capture and Storage
(CCS), co-chaired by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and
the Department of Energy (DOE), delivered a series of recommendations to
the president today on overcoming the barriers to the widespread,
cost-effective deployment of CCS within 10 years. CCS is a group of
technologies for capturing, compressing, transporting and permanently
storing power plant and industrial source emissions of carbon dioxide.
Rapid development and deployment of clean coal technologies,
particularly carbon capture and storage (CCS), will help position the
United States as a leader in the global clean energy race. The report
concludes that CCS can play an important role in domestic greenhouse gas
(GHG) emissions reductions while preserving the option of using coal and
other abundant domestic fossil energy resources.
In February 2010, the president charged the task force with proposing a
plan to overcome the barriers to the widespread, cost-effective
deployment of carbon capture and storage within 10 years, with a goal of
bringing five to 10 commercial demonstration projects online by 2016.
Charting the path toward clean coal is essential to achieving the
administration’s clean energy goals, supporting American jobs and
reducing emissions of carbon pollution. Already, the United States has
made the largest government investment in carbon capture and storage of
any nation in history, and these investments are being matched by
private capital. DOE is currently pursuing multiple demonstration
projects using close to $4 billion in federal funds, matched by more
than $7 billion in private investments, which will begin to pave the way
for widespread deployment of advanced CCS technologies within a decade.
Ongoing EPA efforts will clarify the existing regulatory framework by
developing requirements tailored for CCS, which will reduce uncertainty
for early projects and help to ensure safe and effective deployment.
"If we can develop the technology to capture the carbon pollution
released by coal, it can create jobs and provide energy well into the
future," President Obama told the nation’s governors when establishing
the task force, co-chaired by Energy Secretary Steven Chu and EPA
Administrator Lisa Jackson.
"These recommendations mark an important step forward in
combating climate change and strengthening our economy through green
jobs - top priorities for this administration," said EPA Administrator
Jackson. "Consistent with these recommendations, EPA is proactively
developing regulations tailored to carbon storage technology that will
reduce uncertainty for early projects and help to ensure safe and
effective use of the technology. By encouraging efforts to develop clean
coal technology we will obtain new tools to reduce greenhouse gas
emissions, create jobs, and make our nation more competitive in the
global race for clean energy technology."
"Around the world countries are moving aggressively on investing in
clean energy," said Energy Secretary Chu. "The U.S. has the ability to
develop clean energy innovation here at home. Rather than sending
billions overseas to pay for clean technologies, we should invest these
dollars here - in America's workers, industries, and innovations."
"A diversified energy portfolio, which includes coal, is important for a
strong 21st century American economy," said Nancy Sutley, Chair of the
White House Council on Environmental Quality. "These recommendations
move us toward bringing safe and deployable CCS technologies to the
marketplace to help us meet the goal of reducing harmful carbon
emissions while continuing to use this energy source."
The report reflects input from 14 federal agencies and departments as
well as hundreds of stakeholders and CCS experts. It addresses the
incentives for CCS adoption and any financial, economic, technological,
legal, institutional, or other barriers to deployment. The task force
also considered how best to coordinate existing federal authorities and
programs, as well as identify areas where additional federal authority
may be necessary.
The report’s main findings and recommendations include:
* CCS is Viable: There are no insurmountable technical, legal,
institutional, or other barriers to the deployment of this technology.
* A Carbon Price is Critical: Widespread cost-effective deployment of
CCS is best achieved with a carbon price, but there are market drivers
and actions that can and are taking place now, which are essential to
support near-term CCS demonstration projects that will pave the way for
broader deployment after a carbon price is in place.
* Federal Coordination should be Strengthened: With additional federal
actions and coordination, the task force believes our nation can meet
the president's near-term goal and get 5-10 commercial demonstration CCS
demonstration projects online by 2016. The report recommends the
creation of a standing federal agency roundtable and expert committee to
facilitate that goal.
* Recommendations on Liability: The task force conducted an in-depth
analysis of options to address concerns that long-term liability could
be a barrier to CCS deployment. It concluded that open-ended federal
indemnification is not a viable alternative but that four approaches
merit further consideration: relying on existing frameworks, limits on
claims, a trust fund, and transfer of liability to the federal
government (with contingencies). Efforts to improve long-term liability
and stewardship frameworks led by EPA, DOE and the Department of Justice
(DOJ) will continue in order to provide evaluation and recommendations
in these areas by late 2011.
Additional recommendations include setting up an effort by DOE and EPA –
in consultation with other agencies – to track regulatory implementation
for early commercial CCS demonstration projects and consider whether
additional statutory revisions are needed. The report also encourages
leveraging existing efforts among federal agencies, states, industry,
and NGOs to gather information and evaluate potential key concerns about
CCS in different areas of the United States and develop a comprehensive
outreach strategy that would include: (1) a broad plan for public
outreach targeted at the general public and decision makers; and (2) a
"more focused engagement with communities that are candidates for CCS
projects, to address such issues as environmental justice."
Many experts consider CCS an important option as part of a portfolio of
strategies – including increased efficiency and greater use of
low-carbon energy resources -- to help mitigate growing atmospheric CO2
emissions from human sources. It can play a major role in reducing GHG
emissions globally. However, widespread cost-effective deployment of CCS
will occur only if the technology is commercially available at
economically competitive prices and supportive national policy
frameworks, such as a cap on carbon pollution, are in place. The
administration’s policy and technology initiatives are intended to
address these needs.
Read the final report:
http://www.fossil.energy.gov/programs/sequestration/ccstf/CCSTaskForceReport2010.pdf
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