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Carbon Capture & Storage: The Need, The Landscape, The Opportunity

Carbon Capture & Storage: The Need, The Landscape, The Opportunity

Carbon Capture & Storage: The Need, The Landscape, The Opportunity


by: Jessica Campbell | April 26, 2023

 


The Need

The scaling of Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) globally is now widely accepted as necessary (rather than desired) when it comes to achieving net-zero commitments and the targets set out in the Paris Agreement. McKinsey & Company estimated that we need to reach at least 4.2 gigatons of storage per annum (GTPA) by 2050, which represents a growth of 120 times current activity level [1]. Estimates by other groups, including the International Energy Agency (IEA), place the volumetric need anywhere between 3 – 10 GTPA to get us 5 – 10% of the way to net-zero. The International Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has indicated that under ideal economic conditions, CCS has the potential to contribute between 15–55% of the cumulative mitigation efforts required to stay within 1.5 degrees. However, for this economic potential to be reached (i.e., to achieve economies of scale), “several hundreds of thousands of [carbon dioxide] CO2 capture systems would need to be installed over the coming century, each capturing some 1 – 5 MTCO2 per year” [2]. This represents a deployment of projects and technology that is unprecedented in its rate and scale. All this to say, no matter which source you look at, the message is clear; we need tremendous amounts of geologic CO2 storage, and we need it at pace.  


The Landscape

Despite the scientific consensus on the need for CCS, the path to implementing projects at scale comes with challenges. For one, the regulatory landscape of countries and jurisdictions to deploy CCS at scale are at varying readiness levels, with most falling in the ‘dismally unprepared’ category. Fortunately, there are many regions throughout Europe, the US, and Canada, where the regulatory frameworks are well developed due to decades-long oil and gas activity, including some dedicated geologic CO2 storage and its relative – Enhanced Oil Recovery (EOR). Even with more advanced regulatory frameworks, CCS projects still face a series of other challenges, including (but not limited to): 1. mineral rights ownership and disputes, 2. back-logs and long lead times for appropriate well permitting (i.e., Class VI in the US), 3. lack of CO2 transport and pipeline infrastructure, and 4. public opinion/acceptance.

The last one, ‘public opinion and acceptance’, often does not receive the attention it deserves as a potential disruptor and real threat to progress on scaling CCS. In just one example, an open letter to the US and Canadian governments was signed by over 500 groups in 2021, calling for a halt to all support for CCS projects [3]. Due to the complex nature of our energy systems, how they interface with society, and an unfortunate history of ecosystem and environmental justice abuses, it should not come as a surprise that CCS is caught in the crosshairs given the size and the wide variety of potential applications for the projects, cross-sectoral and economy-wide. It will take a cohesive, patient, and relationship-based approach to help educate and repair some of the damage done. Unfortunately, it is a common misconception that CCS is a band-aid solution that will distract from the energy transition and investment in alternate fuels. The reality is that CCS will enable the energy transition, with the key word being transition. CCS will allow the production of lower-cost low-CI hydrogen and other alternate fuels needed to reduce emissions in hard-to-abate sectors. Short-term access to these fuels is critical to achieving emission reductions now and allows time for the supply of renewable fuels and energy sources to ramp up to meet the ever-growing demand. 

Regarding environmental markets, CCS projects are considered an emissions avoidance rather than a removal since the CO2 never actually enters the atmosphere. Logically, the prevention emissions should be valued equally compared to removing them after the fact. Nevertheless, a false dichotomy occurs in the market, where removal-based credits are viewed as superior to (i.e., trading at 2–3 times the price) avoidance credits and activities. The value differential is a function of capital cost – direct air capture (DAC) and other carbon removal technologies and activities are currently more expensive to implement. Still, there is also a component associated with optics, which is unfortunate. Analogous to a bathtub full of water, the bath would never drain if one pulled the plug but kept the tap running. Removals are an exciting technology development associated with vital natural system restoration projects and activities. However, we are still too early in the energy transition to focus our attention too squarely on removals – we still need high-quality avoidance projects that have the potential to mitigate emissions on the gigaton scale, which includes CCS. As is a common theme throughout this blog, we need more of both, not either/or.

Despite the regulatory challenges and bumpy road ahead, hundreds of companies have either proposed CCS projects or are evaluating opportunities, including many of ClimeCo’s clients. In this valiant pursuit, ClimeCo has accepted the challenge and is working to support our clients through strategic advisory services and de-risking investment through partnerships and optimization of multiple potential revenue streams.


The Opportunity

The recent changes to the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) and the opportunities it has created for CCS are generally understood – albeit in theory. Projects that plan to sequester CO2 in secure, geologic formations can receive up to $85 per tonne of CO2 injected under the 45Q tax credit. What is often less clear are the opportunities for additional revenue streams, specifically within the voluntary carbon market (VCM), and the rules around stacking the various available incentives. Opportunities for value creation outside of the VCM arise from low-carbon fuel markets and green premiums for low-carbon products. How these fit together within an optimized organizational strategy while achieving broader emission reduction goals can be challenging to navigate. Although ClimeCo takes a holistic approach to value creation via all channels, the paragraphs below will highlight the recent developments that will open pathways in the VCM. 

Historically, North America’s only VCM methodologies for generating carbon credits from CO2 sequestration activities were specifically designed for and limited to EOR. The absence of a methodology for geologic storage was just a symptom of the economic realities of pure geological storage projects – most would just not pencil at previous incentives levels, even with stackable carbon credits. However, the new IRA is a game changer, placing hundreds of millions more tonnes per annum within the realm of potentially economical or marginal. The VCM is ramping up to help projects falling in the ‘uneconomic’ or ‘marginal’ categories to be economic and to de-risk the investments by diversifying the revenue streams. The cost of CCS projects varies widely by industry. Those in hard-to-abate sectors have a particularly high cost of capture to low purity and/or concentration of CO2 streams. Fortunately, there will be at least one, if not two, new VCM methodologies available in the near term that will allow for the creation of voluntary carbon credits from CCS. This opportunity will be particularly advantageous for those in hard-to-abate sectors where the $85 per tonne alone is not enough.

The American Carbon Registry (ACR) is in the process of finalizing its methodology that would allow for carbon credits created from the following activities: geologic storage, direct air capture (DAC), EOR, and bioenergy with CCS (BECCS). We expect the methodology to be available by the end of 2023.

Verra is working with the CCS+ Initiative to develop a series of modules for CCS projects for credit creation in the VCM. Verra has indicated that the first module will allow for crediting of the same activities as under the ACR methodology; however, it needs to be clarified as to whether any negative emissions (i.e., removals) associated with BECCS will be included in the first release.

For organizations at various stages in the CCS project development journey, it will be necessary to understand all the potential revenue streams associated with the project, including voluntary carbon credits as well as other value-creation opportunities in low-carbon fuel markets, compliance markets, and additional government grants and funding and the associated value, risks, challenges, and optimization opportunities. It is also important to understand how utilizing the VCM fits within the broader organizational strategy, emission reduction targets, and a product’s value in the market (i.e., green premiums).



[
1]  McKinsey & Company, Scaling the CCUS Industry to Achieve Net-Zero Emissions
[2]  Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), Carbon Dioxide Capture and Storage
[3]  Oil Change International, Open Letter to US and Canadian Governments



About the Author

Jessica Campbell, Director of Energy Innovations, leads ClimeCo’s CCS and Low Carbon Fuels Program. She is passionate about the power of utilizing environmental markets to expedite decarbonization goals and supporting our clients through the energy transition.       

 

What is the role of the IC-VCM?

What is the role of the IC-VCM?

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What is the role of the IC-VCM?


by: Jessica Campbell | April 19, 2023

What is the role of IC-VCM?


Boyertown, Pennsylvania (April 19, 2023) –
The Integrity Council for the Voluntary Carbon Market (IC-VCM) emerged last year as one of the recommendations of the task force on scaling the voluntary carbon markets (TSVCM). The TSVCM recognized the power of the VCM and its potential to play a more significant role in the mitigation of climate change but suggested that there needed to be increased standardization across the market to reach its full potential and achieve maximum benefit. The mandate of the IC-VCM is, therefore, to ‘build integrity and scale will follow.’ After holding a public engagement period during the latter half of 2022, the IC-VCM launched its updated Core Carbon Principles (CCPs) in March 2023.

The recent launch is considered ‘Release One’ and includes the finalized list of the 10 CCPs and the Programme-level Assessment Framework. Using the Programme-level Assessment Framework, GHG registries, and programs can now start to prepare their applications to be CCP eligible. The IC-VCM has recognized the overlap between the programme-level assessment and CORSIA’s rigorous assessment process that most programs have already undergone. Therefore, CORSIA-eligible programs will only need to demonstrate compliance with some additional criteria rather than the whole framework.

The remaining part of the Assessment Framework will determine the eligible credit categories and will be released in Q2. At that point, both the eligible programs and credit categories can be assessed. The IC-VCM has indicated that it expects decisions on which credits can be labeled CCP-compliant as early as the end of 2023.

The 10 CCPs have not changed significantly since the draft release but are now grouped into three main categories:

  1. Governance – effective governance at the credit programme-level, tracking of credits through a registry system, transparency, third-party validation, and verification
  2. Emissions Impact – additionality, permanence, robust quantification, and no double counting
  3. Sustainable Development – social and environmental safeguards, and avoid locking in technologies or practices that are incompatible with reaching net zero GHG emissions by mid-century

There will also be three voluntary attributes that a project can apply for:

  1. Host country authorization pursuant to Article 6 of the Paris Agreement
  2. Share of Proceeds for Adaptation
  3. Quantified Positive SDG Impacts 

ClimeCo is confident that the projects and registries we work with represent the highest quality in the market and are part of a market ecosystem that strives to make continuous improvements, regardless of the work of the IC-VCM. We are hopeful that the IC-VCM’s assessment will highlight the positive impact those programs and projects are having and the high standards that are already adhered to. 

Although we generally agree with the evaluation criteria for governance and emissions impact, there remains some uncertainty about how the IC-VCM will ultimately evaluate projects under category 3 – Sustainable Development. As the CCP label is a binary decision (pass/fail), we hope there is recognition of the highly variable opportunities and constraints based on a project’s geography and category, as well as the importance of supporting transition technologies today which will lead us down the path of continuous innovation.    

For more information or to discuss how ClimeCo can drive value for your organization, contact us through our website or info@climeco.com.

 


About the Integrity Council for the Voluntary Carbon Market

The Integrity Council for the Voluntary Carbon Market (Integrity Council) is an independent governance body for the voluntary carbon market.

They do this by setting and enforcing definitive global threshold standards, drawing on the best science and expertise available, so high-quality carbon credits channel finance towards genuine and additional greenhouse gas reductions and removals that go above and beyond what can otherwise be achieved, and contribute to climate resilient development.

For more information visit their website

About ClimeCo

ClimeCo is a respected global advisor, transaction facilitator, trader, and developer of environmental commodity market products and related solutions. We specialize in voluntary carbon, regulated carbon, renewable energy credits, plastics credits, and regional criteria pollutant trading programs. Complimenting these programs is a team of professionals skilled in providing sustainability program management solutions and developing and financing of GHG abatement and mitigation systems.

Contact us at +1 484.415.0501info@climeco.com, or through our website climeco.com to learn more. Be sure to follow us on LinkedIn, Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter using our handle, @ClimeCo.

ClimeCo Responds to the Greenhouse Gas Protocol’s Surveys for Standard and Guidance Updates

ClimeCo Responds to the Greenhouse Gas Protocol’s Surveys for Standard and Guidance Updates

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ClimeCo Responds to the Greenhouse Gas Protocol’s Surveys for Standard and Guidance Updates


Our experts weigh in on recommended updates to the global greenhouse gas accounting standard.


by: Garrett Keraga | March 20, 2023

ClimeCo's Response to the Greenhouse Gas Protocol
Boyertown, Pennsylvania (March 20, 2023) –
In 2023, the Greenhouse Gas Protocol (GHG Protocol) invited stakeholders to recommend updates to its widely-used standards and guidance for measuring greenhouse gas inventories. This presents a rare opportunity to help shape the way that companies report on emissions, track them over time, and use market-based mechanisms to support global decarbonization efforts. The ClimeCo team gathered leaders from around the company with expertise in measuring inventories, developing environmental commodities, and helping companies lower their emissions. We’ve crafted a response to help push the industry forward constructively and mindfully.

In the survey for the Corporate Accounting and Reporting Standard, we indicated a high level of satisfaction with the existing material and provided a range of minor tweaks to improve fidelity. This included suggestions like improved guidance on emission factor databases and leased asset accounting, improved accounting procedures for companies or portfolio managers with high levels of inorganic growth, and a clear recommendation on a baseline recalculation threshold.

Our responses for Scope 2 and Scope 3 similarly indicated satisfaction with the current guidance but suggested several more areas of improvement. Within Scope 2, we requested clearer guidance around renewable energy certificate (REC) boundaries and improved residual mix emission factor availability globally. We did not see a current need for revisions to the REC market that incorporate proof of total change in low-carbon supply. Our Scope 3 suggestions included creation of a remote work emissions category: consistent allocation of upstream versus downstream emissions, additional industry specific guidance for several categories, and guidance around market-based mechanisms within Scope 3.

Our experts had numerous suggestions for the future of market-based accounting, including expanding market-based accounting into Scope 1 and Scope 3 through inset credits, mass-balance certification, and book and claim certificates. We advised the GHG Protocol to establish systems that use the same principles as the current market-based Scope 2 reporting. Our team believes the voluntary market will continue incentivizing fast-paced, cost-effective progress toward net-zero, regardless of physical limitations. The graphic below explains how this system might work with a book and claim approach for a shipping company.

GHG Protocol - Book & Claim Accounting: Shipping


About ClimeCo

ClimeCo is a respected global advisor, transaction facilitator, trader, and developer of environmental commodity market products and related solutions. We specialize in voluntary carbon, regulated carbon, renewable energy credits, plastics credits, and regional criteria pollutant trading programs. Complimenting these programs is a team of professionals skilled in providing sustainability program management solutions and developing and financing of GHG abatement and mitigation systems.

For more information or to discuss how ClimeCo can drive value for your organization, contact us at +1 484.415.0501, info@climeco.com, or through our website climeco.com. Be sure to follow us on LinkedIn, Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter using our handle, @ClimeCo.

ClimeCo Partners with Aclymate, a Software Solution for Small Businesses Interested in Making Climate Impacts

ClimeCo Partners with Aclymate, a Software Solution for Small Businesses Interested in Making Climate Impacts

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Nancy Marshall, Vice President, Marketing
+1 484.415.7603 or nmarshall@climeco.com  

ClimeCo Partners with Aclymate, a Software Solution for Small Businesses Interested in Making Climate Impacts

 

Boyertown, Pennsylvania (September 8, 2022) – ClimeCo, a global company that focuses on developing and trading environmental commodities and advising clients on sustainability and emerging environmental markets, announces a partnership with Aclymate.

Aclymate is a web-based application solution for small and medium-sized businesses that desire to address their climate footprint but are otherwise unable to do so in a practical or economical manner. They offer users a robust, intuitive, and friendly way to transform their best climate intentions into climate action so that any business can become a climate leader.

“There are more than 30 million small businesses in the United States alone. Small business owners are passionate about being part of the solution to environmental problems,” says Derek Six, Chief Operating Officer at ClimeCo. “Still, there were not any affordable and effective tools for these business owners to begin their sustainability journey. Aclymate empowers small businesses, and ClimeCo is excited to support this effort.”

Aclymate provides carbon footprint and certification services to smaller companies at a cost-effective price, allowing them to show their customers, employees, and stakeholders that they are taking action in the fight against climate change.

“I have been fortunate to know a great many players in carbon markets, and I can say, unequivocally, that Derek and the ClimeCo team are amongst the best,” says Mike Smith, CEO of Aclymate. “I am very excited about this partnership and how we can bring the power of ClimeCo to the small and medium-sized business space.”

ClimeCo will participate on the Board of Directors and support Aclymate in maintaining a great selection of high-quality offset projects. This collaboration will provide Aclymate’s clients with expanded services, including expert ESG Advisory from ClimeCo. The partnership will also strengthen Aclymate’s carbon accounting and carbon offset offerings to a market segment that is generally underserved.

 


About ClimeCo

ClimeCo is a respected global advisor, transaction facilitator, trader, and developer of environmental commodity market products and related solutions. We specialize in voluntary carbon, regulated carbon, renewable energy credits, plastics credits, and regional criteria pollutant trading programs. Complimenting these programs is a team of professionals skilled in providing sustainability program management solutions and developing and financing of GHG abatement and mitigation systems.


For more information or to discuss how ClimeCo can drive value for your organization, contact us at +1 484.415.0501, info@climeco.com, or through our website climeco.com. Be sure to follow us on LinkedIn, Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter using our handle, @ClimeCo.


About Aclymate 

Aclymate empowers small and medium-sized businesses to become Climate Leaders. With no special knowledge required, our customers can determine their emissions footprint in under 10 minutes per month, find ways to reduce their impact, and offset what cannot be eliminated – all leading to our Climate Leader certification. For more information or to sign up for a free consultation, please go to aclymate.com.

The New Age (Old) Question:  What does it mean to be “Carbon Neutral”?

The New Age (Old) Question: What does it mean to be “Carbon Neutral”?

The New Age (Old) Question: What does it mean to be “Carbon Neutral”?

Carbon neutral blog image - trees and buildings

If you are reading this, you may already have some curiosity about carbon neutrality.  Maybe some knowledge, experience.

However, you may also have in mind the common question that we at ClimeCo hear from our clients and prospective clients:  What does it mean when a company says they want to become (more) “carbon neutral”?

Well, fearless reader, we can offer you one of many internet-found, quick and succinct definitions with this one from the Cambridge Business English Dictionary:

Climate Neutral is an adjective under the subsets of environment and social responsibility and defined as:  If something such as an organization or activity is carbon neutral, it removes the same amount of carbon dioxide from the environment as it releases into the environment.  (© 2019 Cambridge University Press)

Still confused?  Feeling inquisitive?  Good!

I proffer that there is more to it.  There are many definitions, understandings and misunderstandings; however, there isn’t absolute guidance regarding how a company or individual can become carbon neutral.  The central tenet is a bit easier to carry and is becoming more standardized.  Being or becoming carbon neutral is not an all-or-nothing effort, nor should it be.  It also need not be a one-time-only effort, rather, there are steps and considerations to be made. 

Central to all of this is determining your carbon footprint (carbon emissions associated with your activities), as this is what must be offset.

Carbon neutral blog - trees

Fortunately, amongst the many widely accepted discussions and guidance, we find the Greenhouse Gas Corporate Protocol (GHG Protocol) ( https://ghgprotocol.org/ ), whose crafters note is used by 9 out of 10 Fortune 500 companies.  From our experience, we have no reason to doubt that claim.  The GHG Protocol is far from new, so it’s no wonder it has global traction.  It is a wonderful answer to the question at hand, too.

Around the late 1990s and early 2000s, much time and effort were spent by a partnership between World Resources Institute (WRI) and the World Business Council for Sustainable Development (WBCSD), along with non-governmental organizations (NGOs), industry, governments and many others focused on creating the GHG Protocol.

At 116 pages, the Corporate GHG Protocol is not short; however, it is an easy, educational, and thorough read.  Most important in any carbon-neutral plan is considering just what your direct and indirect emissions are and accounting for them.  For instance, do you generate emissions from your ongoing site operations, or do you purchase generated power from elsewhere (either with or without emissions)?  Do you transport products?  The list goes on; however, the GHG Protocol offers a solution by providing a 3-step list of GHG “Scoping” for consideration (known as “Scope 1”; “Scope 2”; and “Scope 3”).

Scope 1 emissions deal with direct emissions.  

In other words, traceable right down to your personal/corporate activities.  Burning wood in a fireplace.  Driving to work.  Producing a chemical product and/or using fossil-fueled equipment, such as boilers.  On-site power generation.  You get the idea.

Scope 2 emissions deal with indirect emissions fostered by electricity consumption.  

In general, such emissions are generated offsite, but precisely because you need electricity.  So, you then account for those greenhouse gas emissions in your tally.

Scope 3 emissions address the balance of indirect emissions.

This scope tends to be optional under the GHG Protocol.  Examples of such items include transport and purchased manufacturing materials that are used onsite.

Apply GHG Protocol

Applying these “Scopes” to assess emissions has become one of the more common bases for calculations in determining annual emissions and/or a baseline to be offset.  The limits of just how far to go thereafter result from a bespoke plan, as these are the emissions that would need to be offset to become carbon neutral (be it partially, or in full).  Please recognize one of the old truisms as a part of such planning; reduce emissions the best you can and then offset the rest.

Carbon neutral means 100% net emissions balanced for a defined period of time.  Those reductions; however, do not necessarily need to all be accomplished on site.  Some, if not all, of these emissions can be offset by purchasing carbon offsets and renewable energy credits (RECs).  Note that use of such credits represents an ongoing obligation.  Emission reduction projects, both on and offsite, are creating reductions necessary for such balancing.  Part of the strategy should be to assess where reductions might first be made internally (e.g., switching to LED light bulbs) and then combining with environmental credits to balance the remaining emissions associated with the facility and its power consumption.  

Carbon neutral blog image - team meeting

The Future of “Being” Carbon Neutral

2019 has seen the continued advent of companies, organizations, and even rock bands looking to become carbon neutral.  Many have published extensive press releases about how they will be carbon neutral by 2023, 2025, 2030, etc.  This is because shareholders, investors, lenders, senior managers and other stakeholders are focused on the need “to do something” about climate change.  Fans, consumers, environmentalists, etc. are pushing for it, so this effort has become a public social responsibility that companies need to promote to show that they are trying to do the right thing and to build brand loyalty. 

From assessments to analysis, planning to execution, project development to sales, and marketing and acquisitions, this is what keeps companies like ClimeCo nimble; constantly developing, assessing, and executing carbon neutral efforts.

What does “being carbon neutral” mean at a higher level?

It means that you are responding to climate change.  You are taking a stand in a socially, financially, and environmentally beneficial manner.  How often is there a triple win in something you do for yourself or your company?  Not very often!  So, what are you waiting for?

Carbon Neutral blog - skyscraper building

About the Author

Andy Kruger, Esq., is well-versed in both law and engineering.  He holds degrees in both fields and has more than 30 years of experience in environmental markets and policy.  He is passionate about Climate Change, Renewable Energy, and helping individuals, organizations, and companies to be better stewards of our world.