Offshore CCS and Ocean Acidification: A Global Long-Term Probabilistic Cost-Benefit Analysis of Climate Change Mitigation
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| Publication date | 2016 |
| Journal | Climatic Change |
| Volume | Issue number | 137 |
| Pages (from-to) | 157-170 |
| Number of pages | 14 |
| Organisations |
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| Abstract |
Public fear over environmental and health impacts of CO2 storage, or over potential leakage of CO2
from geological reservoirs, is among the reasons why over the past
decade CCS has not yet been deployed on a scale large enough so as to
meaningfully contribute to mitigate climate change. Storage of CO2
under the seabed moves this climate mitigation option away from
inhabited areas and could thereby take away some of the opposition
towards this technology. Given that in the event of CO2
leakage through the overburden in the case of sub-seabed CCS, the ocean
could function as buffer for receiving this greenhouse gas, instead of
it directly being emitted into the atmosphere, offshore CCS could also
address concerns over the climatic impacts of CO2 seepage. We point out that recent geological studies provide evidence that to date CO2
has been safely stored under the seabed. Leakage for individual
offshore CCS operations could thus be unlikely from a technical point of
view, if storage sites are well chosen, well managed and well
monitored. But we argue that on a global longterm scale, for an ensemble
of thousands or millions of storage sites, leakage of CO2
could take place in certain cases and/or countries for e.g. economic,
institutional, legal or safety-cultural reasons. In this paper we
investigate what the impact could be in terms of temperature increase
and ocean acidification if leakage occurs at a global level, and address
the question what the relative roles could be of on- and offshore CCS
if mankind desires to divert the damages resulting from climate change.
For this purpose, we constructed a top-down energy-environment-economy
model, with which we performed a probabilistic Monte-Carlo cost-benefit
analysis of climate change mitigation with on- and offshore CCS as
specific CO2 abatement options. One of our main conclusions
is that, even under conditions with non-zero (permille/year) leakage for
CCS activity globally, both onshore and offshore CCS should probably –
on economic grounds at least - still account for anywhere between 20 %
and 80 % of all future CO2 abatement efforts under a broad range of CCS cost assumptions.
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| Document type | Article |
| Note | With supplementary file. |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.1007/s10584-016-1674-5 |
| Downloads |
Offshore CCS and ocean acidification
(Final published version)
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| Supplementary materials | |
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