Australia: Shell Signs Up to Join Australia’s Global Carbon Capture Body
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Tuesday, 02 December 2008 |
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Shell Plc will become a founding member of Australia’s A$100 million
($64 million) carbon capture and storage institute aimed at speeding
low-emissions power output.
Shell will “actively participate” in the institute’s programs and
services, the company said today in an e-mailed statement, without
elaborating. The work should help cut the cost of the “expensive”
carbon capture and storage, or CCS, technology in the period through to
2020 when the first projects will be developed, it said.
Australia’s government in September said it will set up the institute,
aimed at fast-tracking and helping finance coal-fired generation
projects that use carbon capture and storage technology to prolong the
use of the fuel while reducing greenhouse pollution. Shell estimates
the technology could cut global carbon dioxide emissions by more than a
third by 2050.
“A safe and cost-effective way to capture and store CO2 from coal, oil
and natural gas is imperative if we are going to meet the challenge of
increase energy demand and the need to tackle climate change,” Graham
Sweeney, Shell’s executive vice president of future fuels and CO2, said
in the statement.
Governments and energy companies need to step up efforts to develop CCS
projects to have a chance of meeting emissions reductions targets,
Nobuo Tanaka, executive director of the International Energy Agency,
said.
PetrolWorld 281108
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