4.8 Article

Assessing the Relative Climate Impact of Carbon Utilization for Concrete, Chemical, and Mineral Production

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 55, Issue 17, Pages 12019-12031

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.1c01109

Keywords

carbon capture and utilization (CCU); life cycle assessment (LCA); climate impact; CO2 utilization for concrete production; CO2 utilization for chemical production; CO2 utilization for mineral production

Funding

  1. Global CO2 Initiative, CSS, School for Environment and Sustainability (SEAS)
  2. Blue Sky Program of the College of Engineering
  3. U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy Bioenergy Technologies Office

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Estimates suggest that by 2050, 6.2 gigatons of CO2 can be captured and utilized through pathways like concrete, chemical, and minerals. However, comparing the climate benefits of these different carbon capture and utilization methods is challenging due to the uncertainty and variability in the early-stage technologies. Stochastically determined climate ROI metric has been proposed to rank and prioritize CO2 utilization pathways, showing that certain concrete and chemical pathways have the highest likelihood of generating a climate benefit.
Estimates show that 6.2 gigatons of carbon dioxide (CO2) can be captured and utilized across three pathways, concrete, chemical, and minerals, by 2050. However, it is difficult to compare the climate benefit across these three carbon capture and utilization (CCU) pathways to determine the most effective use of captured CO2. The life cycle assessment methods to evaluate the climate benefit of CCU chemicals should additionally account for the change in material properties of concrete due to CO2 utilization. Furthermore, with most CO2 utilization technologies being in the early stages of research and development, the uncertainty and variability in process and inventory data present a significant challenge in evaluating the climate benefit. We present a stochastically determined climate return on investment (ROI) metric to rank and prioritize CO2 utilization across 20 concrete, chemical and mineral pathways based on the realized climate benefit. We show that two concrete pathways, which use CO2 during concrete mixing, and two chemical pathways, which produce formic acid through hydrogenation of CO2 and carbon monoxide through dry reforming of methane, generate the greatest climate ROI and are the only CCU pathways with a higher likelihood of generating a climate benefit than a climate burden.

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