4.8 Article

Hubs and clusters approach to unlock the development of carbon capture and storage - Case study in Spain

Journal

APPLIED ENERGY
Volume 300, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.apenergy.2021.117418

Keywords

CO2 emission hubs; Hubs and clusters; Source-to-sink; CCS site selection; Spain

Funding

  1. Grup Consolidat de Recerca Geologia Sediment`aria [2017SGR-824]
  2. DGICYT Spanish Project [PGC2018093903BC22]
  3. China Scholarship Council [201806450043]
  4. MICINN [IJC2018036074I, RYC2018026335I]
  5. European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union [801809]
  6. Centre of Excellence Severo Ochoa (Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation) [CEX2018000794S]
  7. Engi-neering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) [EP/S027815/1]
  8. EPSRC [EP/P026214/1 UKCCSRC 2017]
  9. EU [837754-STRATEGY CCUS]
  10. Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities [BEAGAL18/00259]
  11. University of Strathclyde Faculty of Engineering

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This study introduces a novel source-to-sink assessment methodology to identify suitable regions for CCS deployment in Spain, selecting potential CO2 sources and storage structures. The research demonstrates that CCS deployment in Spain could help reduce around 21% of carbon emissions and be a significant contributor to achieving the mid-century net-zero target of the Paris Agreement.
Many countries have assigned an indispensable role for carbon capture and storage (CCS) in their national climate change mitigation pathways. However, CCS deployment has stalled in most countries with only limited commercial projects realised mainly in hydrocarbon-rich countries for enhanced oil recovery. If the Paris Agreement is to be met, then this progress must be replicated widely, including hydrocarbon-limited countries. In this study, we present a novel source-to-sink assessment methodology based on a hubs and clusters approach to identify favourable regions for CCS deployment and attract renewed public and political interest in viable deployment pathways. Here, we apply this methodology to Spain, where fifteen emission hubs from both the power and the hard-to-abate industrial sectors are identified as potential CO2 sources. A priority storage structure and two reserves for each hub are selected based on screening and ranking processes using a multi-criteria decision-making method. The priority source-to-sink clusters are identified indicating four potential development regions, with the North-Western and North-Eastern Spain recognised as priority regions due to resilience provided by different types of CO2 sources and geological structures. Up to 68.7 Mt CO2 per year, comprising around 21% of Spanish emissions can be connected to clusters linked to feasible storage. CCS, especially in the hard-to-abate sector, and in combination with other low-carbon energies (e.g., blue hydrogen and bioenergy), remains a significant and unavoidable contributor to the Paris Agreement's mid-century net-zero target. This study shows that the hubs and clusters approach can facilitate CCS deployment in Spain and other hydrocarbon limited countries.

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