Cape Times

SA AIMS TO BRING COUNTRY’S FIRST CARBON CAPTURE PROJECT ONLINE IN 2023

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SOUTH Africa has started geological mapping at the country’s first carbon capture and storage (CCS) site, where it plans to inject vast quantities of CO₂ deep undergroun­d from 2023, a senior Council for Geoscience official said. The project will be based around the town of Leandra, Mpumalanga province, in South Africa’s north east, a carbon emissions hot spot and home to several coal-fired power stations as well as Sasol’s Secunda coal-to-liquids fuel plant, the world’s largest. Releasing around 470 million tons of carbon dioxide (CO₂) a year, South Africa is the continent’s biggest emitter of greenhouse gases, and coal provides the bulk of its electricit­y. CCS is controvers­ial, with environmen­talists saying it risks becoming an excuse to continue burning fossil fuels, and could lead to neglect of nature’s own carbon capture system, forests, which also sustain biodiversi­ty and rainfall. David Khoza, the CGS executive manager running the project, said the project would link a pipeline transporti­ng compressed CO₂ from major emitting sources such as Secunda directly to the identified injection site that is overlain with an “impermeabl­e rock cap”. “We will test the feasibilit­y of injecting between 10 000 to 50 000 metric tons of CO₂ (a year) to a depth of at least 1km, with the first injection seen late in 2023,” Khoza said. South Africa had approximat­ely 150 gigatons of potential storage capacity, mainly in offshore basins on the east and west coast, researcher­s said. Sasol said it was working with the CGS, but it may not be economical­ly viable.

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