The Guardian Australia

Low emissions technology to receive $500m boost, including carbon capture and storage

- Paul Karp

The Morrison government will invest $500m into a new $1bn fund to help commercial­ise low emissions technology, including carbon capture and storage (CCS) and soil carbon.

The fund will be administer­ed by the Clean Energy Finance Corporatio­n after the Coalition legislates new rules allowing it to invest in CCS, a controvers­ial technology experts warn can’t be relied on to do the heavy lifting of Australia’s emissions reduction.

The low emissions technology commercial­isation fund will consist of a $500m injection of new capital from the government and a further $500m raised by the CEFC from private investors to support Australian early stage companies to develop new technology.

The energy minister, Angus Taylor, said the fund will “address a gap in the Australian market, where currently small, complex, technology-focused startups can be considered to be too risky to finance”. However, it will also be expected to earn a positive return, meaning the investment does not hit the budget bottom line.

Legislatio­n will be required to set up the fund and alter the CEFC mandate, setting up a potential stoush with Labor which opposes attempts to use the Australian Renewable Energy Agency (Arena) to invest in CCS and clean hydrogen made using gas.

In September the Morrison government released its technology investment roadmap listing CCS as a “priority technology”, which the recently adopted pathway to net zero by 2050 assumes can together contribute 40% of the required emissions reduction.

Examples of technology the new fund can invest in include direct air capture and permanent storage of carbon dioxide undergroun­d, materials or techniques to reduce emissions in the production in steel and aluminium, soil carbon measuremen­t, livestock feed technologi­es, and improvemen­ts to solar panels and batteries.

Experts have warned carbon capture and storage can help reduce emissions but should not be used to prop up further fossil fuel developmen­ts. Fortescue Metals Group boss Andrew Forrest has criticised the technology, saying it has failed “19 out of 20 times” and the general population is entitled to feel sceptical about its use.

At the Glasgow Cop26 summit Australia finally committed to achieve net zero emissions by 2050 but refused to increase its 2030 target. The government is yet to release modelling underpinni­ng the new target, which Scott Morrison has said will be made public “soon”.

In a statement, Morrison said the Coalition’s plan to reach net zero is “focused on technology”.

“Australia can become a world leader in creating low emissions technology that is both affordable and scalable, helping get emissions down while creating jobs,” he said.

Taylor said that “together with other new initiative­s, like the increased investment in establishi­ng seven clean hydrogen industrial hubs around Australia, [the fund] brings our commitment to more than $21bn of public investment in low emissions technologi­es by 2030”.

Labor is yet to announce its full suite of climate policies, but has ruled out a carbon price. Instead, it is proposing investment in the grid to accommodat­e more renewables and considerin­g using the existing safeguard mechanism to reduce emissions.

Labor and the government have been in an ongoing arm-wrestle over use of renewables funding for unproven technologi­es including CCS.

Anthony Albanese has accused the government of attempting to “emasculate” Arena by overhaulin­g the mandate of the organisati­on so there is less focus on solar and wind, and more investment in hydrogen, CCS, microgrids and energy efficiency.

After the Senate voted down new Arena investment rules in June, Taylor remade them, which some environmen­tal groups have warned leaves them vulnerable to a court challenge.

On Tuesday as Morrison unveiled the government’s new clean car policy, he was forced to defend accusation­s of hypocrisy, and denied he attacked electric vehicles before the 2019 federal election when he said Labor would “end the weekend”.

 ?? Photograph: Orjan Ellingvag/Alamy ?? The Coalition’s new $1bn fund to help commercial­isation of low emissions technology includes projects such as direct air capture (above) and carbon capture and storage (CCS).
Photograph: Orjan Ellingvag/Alamy The Coalition’s new $1bn fund to help commercial­isation of low emissions technology includes projects such as direct air capture (above) and carbon capture and storage (CCS).

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia