Jamaica Gleaner

Germany plans to enable undergroun­d storage of carbon dioxide at offshore sites

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GERMANY PLANS to enable undergroun­d carbon storage at offshore sites, pushing ahead with a much-discussed technology in an acknowledg­ement that time is running out to combat climate change, the country’s vice-chancellor said on Monday.

Europe’s biggest economy is making good progress with expanding renewable energy sources and usage, but a solution is needed for the carbon dioxide emitted by some sectors such as the cement industry that are “hard to abate”, said Robert Habeck, who is also the economy and climate minister.

Germany, which is home to many energy-intensive industries, aims to cut its emissions to net zero by 2045.

Habeck’s proposed “carbon management strategy”, which still needs to be turned into detailed legislatio­n, foresees enabling the transport of carbon dioxide and its storage under the sea in Germany’s exclusive economic zone, except in marine conservati­on areas. It doesn’t foresee allowing storage sites on land, but Habeck said that could be considered later if German state government­s approve.

Opponents maintain that so-called carbon capture and storage is unproven at scale and has been less effective than alternativ­es, such as solar and wind, at decarbonis­ing the energy sector.

Habeck, a member of the environmen­talist Green party, recalled opposition to carbon storage when it was discussed in the 2000s. But he said “the technology has been developed further ... and from my point of view, it is mature and safe”, and that it is now being used elsewhere, not just in research projects.

Neighbouri­ng Denmark last year launched an ambitious project that aims to bury vast amounts of carbon dioxide beneath the North Sea.

“Time has run out,” Habeck said at a news conference in Berlin. “In the 2000s, you could perhaps say, ‘let’s wait and see what might happen’; today we see that we haven’t found any technologi­cal solution for cement and other areas that ensures climate neutrality.”

“We are heading towards exceeding 1.5 degrees, which means that we are no longer in a luxury or comfort zone where we can somehow wait,” Habeck added. “We have to use what we have.”

He was referencin­g the internatio­nal goal of trying to limit future warming to 1.5º Celsius (2.7º Fahrenheit) since pre-industrial times.

Stopping warming at 1.5ºC or so can avoid, or at least lessen, some of the most catastroph­ic future climate change harms, and, for some people, is a life-or-death matter, scientists have found in many reports.

Habeck said it will be “a few years” before Germany can store CO2 under the sea, and that it would be wise to coordinate European initiative­s. As well as the Danish project, he pointed to Norway, the Netherland­s and the United Kingdom.

Environmen­tal group Greenpeace complained that the German plans “bear the mark of the energy industry and heavy industry”, and would allow even industries for which there are “climate-friendly solutions” to carry on as they have to date.

“That is expensive, not sustainabl­e, and encumbers future generation­s with further long-term liabilitie­s,” Karsten Smid, an energy expert with the group’s German branch, said in a statement.

 ?? AP ?? A cement production plant of Heidelberg Materials is pictured in Ennigerloh, Germany, on Monday, February 26, 2024. Cement production is one of the biggest emitters of carbon dioxide emissions. Germany plans to enable undergroun­d carbon storage at offshore sites.
AP A cement production plant of Heidelberg Materials is pictured in Ennigerloh, Germany, on Monday, February 26, 2024. Cement production is one of the biggest emitters of carbon dioxide emissions. Germany plans to enable undergroun­d carbon storage at offshore sites.

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