Cape Breton Post

Feds want two new carbon capture hubs

- ROD NICKEL NIA WILLIAMS

WINNIPEG/CALGARY — Canada is pushing to provide incentives for at least two new massive carbon capture projects by 2030, a federal government document showed, with nearly a dozen oil and gas companies already pursuing rights to store carbon dioxide in Alberta's vast undergroun­d caverns.

The hubs to collect carbon from clusters of emitters would advance Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's goal of cutting emissions by 40-45 per cent from 2005 levels by 2030. The global oil industry is betting heavily that carbon capture utilizatio­n and storage (CCUS) can become a multi-billion-dollar global business with government and private investment.

To encourage private investment in CCUS projects, Canada is counting on its carbon price, which is set to rise to $170 per tonne of carbon by 2030 from $40, a planned tax credit, and its Clean Fuel Regulation (CFR), which requires lower emissions intensity in fuel.

The cost of building the projects, and their locations, are not yet known.

The two carbon storage hubs would be planned or under constructi­on by 2030, with Canada sequesteri­ng at least 15 million tonnes of carbon annually by that year in total, according to the Natural Resources Department's draft CCUS strategy, obtained by Reuters after it was shared privately in July with industry stakeholde­rs.

“The big takeaway is the federal government is pretty serious about CCUS,” a Calgary oil industry source said.

Canada's four existing projects, representi­ng 15 per cent of global facilities, currently capture four million tonnes per year, according to the Canadian government.

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