A Pathway Toward Reducing CO2 Emissions from the Industrial Sector
This study introduces a methodology for estimating capture, compression, and transport costs for CO2 captured from irreplaceable industrial sources of varying exhaust rates and composition.
Air Pollutant Reductions from Carbon Capture
Technologies for capturing carbon dioxide emissions at the source are a key solution for decarbonizing large industrial facilities that lack other options for mitigating their contribution to climate change.
What will it take to get to Net zero Emissions in California?
Greenhouse gas emissions estimated with our system-wide model for California agree well with the estimates of the California Air Resources Board (CARB) Reference Case and Proposed Scenario with similar assumptions.
Carbon Capture Co-benefits: Carbon capture’s role in removing pollutants and reducing health impacts
Carbon capture is a valuable technology for reducing the carbon emissions of point source emitters in various sectors.
Cash flow modeling shows carbon capture and storage can help meet climate goals
This report builds on part three of a series (parts one and two here) about the economics of oilsands carbon capture and storage (CCS) projects in Canada. It also expands on our analysis done for a previous report analyzing the policy landscape for CCS in Canada’s oilsands.
How the Economics of Carbon Capture and Storage Projects in California Can Serve Communities, the Economy and the Climate
Deployment of the technology is necessary for the state to reach its goal of becoming carbon-neutral by 2045 and reduce statewide human-caused emissions by 85% from 1990 levels.
Net-Zero America: Potential Pathways, Infrastructure, and Impacts
A growing number of governments and companies are pledgingnet-zero emissions by 2050. For the US as a wholeto achieve this requires eliminating or offsetting today’s emission of ~6 billion tCO2e/year.
An Action Plan for Carbon Capture and Storage in California: Opportunities, Challenges, and Solutions
California is a leader in addressing climate change. With some of the strongest decarbonization targets in the country—40 percent emission reductions by 2030, carbon neutrality by 2045, and net-negative emissions thereafter—California continues to pursue innovative policies to achieve ambitious emissions reductions.
Getting to Neutral: Options for Negative Carbon Emissions in California
This report is an assessment of negative emissions pathways— ones that physically remove CO2 from the atmosphere— that can help California achieve carbon neutrality by 2045, or sooner.
A Pathway Toward Reducing CO2 Emissions from the Industrial Sector
This work represents a techno-economic analysis of CO2 emissions from industrial processes, identification of regional CO2 utilization opportunities, and a method to estimate the levelized cost of CO2 capture, compression, and transport.