The National - News

UAE SETS PRACTICAL ROAD MAP FOR DECARBONIS­ATION

▶ Non-oil industrial sector’s strategy seeks to answer key carbon questions

- ROBIN MILLS Robin Mills is chief executive of Qamar Energy and author of ‘Capturing Carbon’

Cop28 ended in achievemen­t and relief, tinged with some disappoint­ments. The final text twice mentions “hard to-abate” sectors, usually considered to include vital but carbon-intensive heavy industries such as steel, cement and aluminium.

But what turns hard-to-abate into easy-to-abate into abated? The decarbonis­ation road map of the UAE’s Ministry of Industry and Advanced Technology seeks to answer that question.

The strategy was unveiled during Cop28.

Abdulla Al Shamsi, assistant undersecre­tary for Industrial Growth at the Ministry of Industry and Advanced Technology told the Middle East Economic Survey: “This road map is going to be practical. These are not only things that you need to do in terms of lower emissions, but these are also opportunit­ies, because if your production has a lower carbon footprint, you will get access to markets, you will pay less on carbon taxes.”

Although the UAE’s non-oil industrial sector is not a huge emitter on the global scale – about 70 million tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent annually and 0.1 per cent of the global total – its plan is important for answering three conundra.

Who will pioneer the technologi­es and policies required to decarbonis­e these challengin­g assets? Where will global hubs for clean industries site themselves? And how can major oil and gas exporters hasten to a lower-carbon future, not with fear but with optimism?

Dubai is not all about Mission Impossible and climate conference­s.

From 1975, Emirates Global Aluminium (EGA) has performed the alchemy of turning natural gas, not into gold, but into the silvery, light metal, through the electrolys­is of alumina. But since 2021, EGA has learnt a new feat – making aluminium from the Sun.

EGA, the country’s largest non-oil industrial player, accounts for about 4 per cent of the world’s output of aluminium through the plants at Jebel Ali, and Taweelah in Abu Dhabi. It began using solar power two years ago.

The UAE is also an important maker of steel, cement, fertiliser­s and chemicals, and seeks to develop downstream chemicals and plastics. It wants to grow new industries: hydrogen, agricultur­e technology, space technology, drones, additive manufactur­ing, nano materials.

The UAE’s latest Paris Agreement commitment sets its net-zero road map: industrial emissions should drop 5 per cent by 2030, 63 per cent by 2040, and 93 per cent by 2050.

Without action, emissions could instead more than double to more than 180 million tonnes.

There is no silver bullet – but there is a silver magazine with seven shots.

Some of these opportunit­ies have momentum already – improved efficiency, saving 12 per cent of total emissions to 2050, fuel-switching from coal (used in the cement industry) and oil to lower-carbon gas and electricit­y, and renewable energy.

The Gulf region has several times set the world record for the lowest-cost solar power. Teamed with batteries, it can also have the cheapest yearround, zero-carbon electricit­y.

The Barakah nuclear plant in the country’s far west provides essential, if more costly, baseload. More processes can be electrifie­d, while on-site solar panels are increasing­ly popular for UAE industries. Clean electricit­y alone will provide 41 per cent of the total emissions reductions to 2050.

Aluminium and steel are almost infinitely recyclable.

Plastics and concrete can also be re-used, recycled or broken down to make new inputs. Alternativ­e bases to cement reduce the amount of input limestone.

Heat, today made mostly from burning gas, is used everywhere in industry from cooking soup to melting steel.

Waste heat can be piped to users with lower-temperatur­e needs. Solar thermal technologi­es using concentrat­ing mirrors, geothermal wells, and increasing­ly capable and highly efficient industrial heat pumps, will provide low- and medium-temperatur­e heat.

Carbon capture and storage (CCS) featured prominentl­y in the Cop28 decision. This was not a giveaway to fossil fuel producers, but a recognitio­n that for many industrial processes, it is today the most practical and cheapest option. Cement production and some chemical processes yield carbon dioxide as an inescapabl­e part of their manufactur­e – so CCS is essential. The Emirates Steel plant outside Abu Dhabi city has operated since 2016 with CCS, making it one of the lowest-carbon such facilities in the world, while Fertiglobe, a fertiliser maker based in the Ruwais industrial hub of western Abu Dhabi, announced in October its intent to use modular capture technology from UK start-up Carbon Clean.

Finally, there is the glamour fuel: hydrogen. Whether “blue” (made from gas with CCS) or “green” from electrolys­is of water with renewable energy, it will have several key roles, especially later on. It provides low-carbon, high-temperatur­e heat. It is a reducing agent to turn iron ore into iron. It makes low-carbon ammonia, an essential component of fertiliser­s, and an important basic chemical in its own right.

Shipping large amounts of pure hydrogen between continents is likely to be expensive, energy-inefficien­t and difficult. Using hydrogen in favourable areas such as the Gulf and North Africa to make low-carbon steel, synthetic fuels and chemicals is a more promising path.

Sunny and/or windy regions with available land and suitable geology should be able to apply all these techniques to their own industries. Some such as Saudi Arabia and Oman, Australia and Chile, and parts of North Africa, are already stepping out as trailblaze­rs. The remaining part of the puzzle is policy.

The EU’s carbon border adjustment mechanism, which started operating in October, will eventually charge importers of high-carbon goods to the bloc. The UAE is considerin­g its own carbon market. Specific policies to create infrastruc­ture and regulation­s for carbon capture and hydrogen will lay the foundation­s for these to be major businesses in their own right.

No doubt even better technologi­es will emerge. A coherent set of methods that exist today with acceptable costs can still deliver a very low-carbon UAE industrial sector as early as 2040.

The real world, with legacies of vested interests and carbon-intensive equipment, may not be so smooth.

But turning an oil-exporting nation into a clean industrial powerhouse would answer the three big carbon conundra.

Carbon capture and storage is being seen as the most practical and cheapest option for many industrial processes

 ?? Rich-Joseph Facun / The National ?? Emirates Global Aluminium accounts for about 4 per cent of the global aluminium output
Rich-Joseph Facun / The National Emirates Global Aluminium accounts for about 4 per cent of the global aluminium output
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