The Scotsman

Carbon capture offers bright future for Scotland

- Phil Kirk

Glasgow’s hosting of COP 26 will make the city synonymous, like Paris, with the battle against climate change. Representa­tives from 200 countries will meet to discuss and hopefully agree coordinate­d action to cut global carbon emissions to levels that will combat climate change. The conversati­ons may be difficult; world leaders have set the 2050 net zero target. Now they must swiftly adopt and work out how to pay for the technologi­es to deliver decarbonis­ation.

In a still energy-hungry world, that challenge is daunting: how shall we cut CO2 emissions? How do we avoid socioecono­mic chaos and offer economic opportunit­y without the cheap abundant energy that hydrocarbo­ns have provided for a century?

Although renewables will play a huge role, they cannot in the short term satisfy the energy needs of heavy industry, nor power at scale and speed the so-called “hard-to-abate” sectors like steel, cement, heavy engineerin­g and transporta­tion.

At Glasgow there needs to be recognitio­n that radically reducing atmospheri­c carbon requires a diversity of energy technologi­es. One, carbon capture and storage (CCS), is on the brink of industrial scale deployment.

Scotland is a leader in this breakthrou­gh and it’s our skills-base in the north-east that will enable it. Carbon capture will allow heavy industry and power generation to continue to use hydrocarbo­ns, but with the harmful emissions trapped permanentl­y.

Over time, carbon capture facilities will also provide a platform to manufactur­e hydrogen, the carbon-free fuel of our future.

Of course, it will cost, and it needs to be done quickly and fairly, but with smart policies and appropriat­e targeted government support - like the UK government’s £1 billion pledge to accelerate CCS – we can accelerate decarbonis­ation of the energy system.

Together with our partners Harbour Enerto

gy is working on the Acorn CCS project to capture CO2 from Scottish industrial sites, including the St Fergus gas terminal. Utilising existing pipeline infrastruc­ture from Scotland’s oil and gas industry, Acorn will store the CO2 safely and permanentl­y in deep, secure rock formations.

Acorn, which has been put forward for UK government support, can be quickly scaled

meet demand. By 2030 it could store half the CO2 or more, identified in the UK government’s Ten Point Plan for a green industrial revolution.

In the future, Acorn will also be vital to accelerati­ng low-carbon hydrogen in Scotland. Some of Harbour Energy’s fields produce gas into the St Fergus terminal and in the future, we would like to either be selling our gas to facilities that capture the carbon or produce hydrogen creating a new carbon-free fuel for Scotland.

Globally CCS can help the world meet its climate ambitions; locally it is vital if Scotland is to reach its ambitious target of net zero by 2045. Other technologi­es will emerge, but right now only CCS can deliver deep emissions reductions for vital industries and maintain a high employment manufactur­ing base in Scotland.

In essence CCUS is central to the “just transition” we want for Scotland: letting the existing energy industry transform itself, re-purposing its existing skills and resources to serve us all and protect Scottish jobs and industry.

We look forward to Acorn being a green industrial hub, attracting new businesses to its zerocarbon energy source and being the cradle of hydrogen technologi­es.

Phil Kirk is CEO Europe for Harbour Energy

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 ??  ?? St Fergus gas terminal in Aberdeensh­ire
St Fergus gas terminal in Aberdeensh­ire

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