Ottawa Citizen

Shell Canada considerin­g projects on carbon capture and storage

Quest success bolsters desire to expand investment on technology in Alberta

- GEOFFREY MORGAN

CALGARY Shell Canada Ltd. is considerin­g new carbon capture and storage (CCS) projects in Alberta as it celebrates a milestone of sequestere­d carbon dioxide from its Quest project near Edmonton.

Shell on Friday announced its Quest CCS project in Fort Saskatchew­an, just outside Alberta’s capital, has stored five million tonnes of CO2 in the five years it has been operationa­l, which is equivalent to taking about 1.25 million cars off the road.

The cost to operate Quest, a CCS project connected to an oilsands upgrader, is also about 35-per-cent less than originally forecast in 2015.

Parent company Royal Dutch Shell PLC has taken what it’s learned from the Quest facility, built with $120 million in federal funds and $745 million from Alberta, to other carbon capture projects around the world, including the recently sanctioned Northern Lights CCS project in Norway alongside Total SA and Equinor ASA.

“Northern Lights has incorporat­ed lessons from Quest, which has been sharing knowledge and lessons over the last five years to encourage more widespread implementa­tion of CCS,” a company release said.

SaskPower’s Boundary Dam CCS project, which is connected to a coal-fired power facility, also uses technologi­cal processes developed for Quest.

But there are still relatively few CCS projects operating in Alberta, despite the provincial government announcing its intention years ago to help fund multiple carbon sequestrat­ion facilities.

“The goal is to leverage (what we’ve learned from Quest) with future projects within the province as well,” said Shell carbon capture expert Sarah Kassam, though she declined to provide details about where the company was looking for additional CCS investment within the province.

Kassam said part of the reason Quest has been able to operate below cost is that the undergroun­d reservoirs where the CO2 is being stored have performed better than expected, which has led to “a lot of uptime, not a lot of downtime.”

If Shell were to build a new project today, it said in a release it would expect the cost to be 30-percent lower.

The cost to build Quest initially was $1.35 billion, 64 per cent of which was paid by the Alberta and federal government­s.

Government spending on Quest ignited a debate in Alberta in recent years about the most efficient way to reduce emissions in the oiland gas-producing province at the lowest cost to taxpayers.

In 2014, Alberta spent $1.4 billion on two projects, including Quest, and that spending accounted for about 10 per cent of total global spending on CCS.

NDP Leader Rachel Notley, after leading her party to an electoral win over the Progressiv­e Conservati­ves in 2015, said the CCS investment­s were overly expensive and brought in a provincial economy-wide carbon levy in an effort to reduce emissions.

Alberta Premier Jason Kenney, after ousting the NDP in the 2019 election, replaced Notley’s carbon levy with a new program that continues to tax carbon emissions, but at a lower rate and one that is based on an industry average rather than based on the best-performing facility in the industry. He has also spoken about the potential for CCS again.

“Carbon capture and storage is working, and Quest is a model facility that others are learning from across the globe to scale up CCS,” Alberta Premier Jason Kenney said in a release on Friday. The province’s energy minister also signalled interest in using the technology to reduce emissions.

“Quest’s CCS milestone is the perfect example of how the use of game-breaking technology will enable Alberta to build on our existing energy foundation, as we also pave the way for emerging sectors to grow and succeed,” Energy Minister Sonya Savage said.

 ?? SHELL ?? Shell Canada Ltd. reported that its flagship Quest project near Edmonton is working better, and at a lower cost, than it previously budgeted for. Alberta and the oilpatch are turning to the technology to cut emissions.
SHELL Shell Canada Ltd. reported that its flagship Quest project near Edmonton is working better, and at a lower cost, than it previously budgeted for. Alberta and the oilpatch are turning to the technology to cut emissions.

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