Carbon capture and storage in the UK and Germany: easier task, stronger commitment?

被引:17
|
作者
Inderberg, Tor Hakon [1 ]
Wettestad, Jorgen [1 ]
机构
[1] Fridtjof Nansen Inst Polhogda, Lysaker, Norway
关键词
CCS; climate-change mitigation; environmental policy; energy sector; CCS;
D O I
10.1080/09644016.2015.1062592
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
A successful carbon capture and storage (CCS) policy and programme is widely considered essential to curbing carbon dioxide emissions. What explains the strikingly different policy outcomes in two key European Union political heavyweights and coal economies, the UK and Germany? The UK has decided to contract two specific CCS projects, with explicit timelines for realisation; Germany has made no such decisions. From scrutiny of official documents and in-depth high-level interviews, it was found that the UK has more favourable structural capacity, including offshore storage capacity (which evokes less conflict) and significant oil-industry expertise, and thus an easier task. Moreover, this structural capacity has interacted with a solid political commitment to bring CCS forward in the UK, including specific, multistage funding and a high-level drive to develop CCS, especially after 2009. In Germany, by contrast, CCS has encountered increasing local and central opposition since 2009, with the Energiewende and renewables being accorded priority.
引用
收藏
页码:1014 / 1033
页数:20
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] A roadmap for carbon capture and storage in the UK
    Gough, Clair
    Mander, Sarah
    Haszeldine, Stuart
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF GREENHOUSE GAS CONTROL, 2010, 4 (01) : 1 - 12
  • [2] Progress with the UK Carbon Capture and Storage Consortium
    Gibbins, Jon
    GREENHOUSE GAS CONTROL TECHNOLOGIES 9, 2009, 1 (01): : 4681 - 4687
  • [3] Stakeholder acceptance of carbon capture and storage in Germany
    Fischedick, Manfred
    Pietzner, Katja
    Supersberger, Nikolaus
    Esken, Andrea
    Kuckshinrichs, Wilhelm
    Zapp, Petra
    Linssen, Jochen
    Schumann, Diana
    Radgen, Peter
    Cremer, Clemens
    Gruber, Edelgard
    Schnepf, Natalie
    Roser, Annette
    Idrissova, Farikha
    GREENHOUSE GAS CONTROL TECHNOLOGIES 9, 2009, 1 (01): : 4783 - 4787
  • [4] Waste materials for carbon capture and storage by mineralisation (CCSM) - A UK perspective
    Sanna, Aimaro
    Dri, Marco
    Hall, Matthew R.
    Maroto-Valer, Mercedes
    APPLIED ENERGY, 2012, 99 : 545 - 554
  • [5] Germany's "No" to carbon capture and storage: Just a question of lacking acceptance?
    Vogele, Stefan
    Ruebbelke, Dirk
    Mayer, Philip
    Kuckshinrichs, Wilhelm
    APPLIED ENERGY, 2018, 214 : 205 - 218
  • [6] Consequences of the UK Energy Market Reform on the Development of Carbon Capture, Transport, and Storage
    Mendelevitch, Roman
    Oei, Pao-Yu
    2015 12TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON THE EUROPEAN ENERGY MARKET (EEM), 2015,
  • [7] Public perception of climate engineering and carbon capture and storage in Germany: survey evidence
    Braun, Carola
    Merk, Christine
    Poenitzsch, Gert
    Rehdanz, Katrin
    Schmidt, Ulrich
    CLIMATE POLICY, 2018, 18 (04) : 471 - 484
  • [8] Effects of carbon dioxide capture and storage in Germany on European electricity exchange and welfare
    Ruebbelke, Dirk
    Voegele, Stefan
    ENERGY POLICY, 2013, 59 : 582 - 588
  • [9] Conditional inevitability: Expert perceptions of carbon capture and storage uncertainties in the UK context
    Evar, Benjamin
    ENERGY POLICY, 2011, 39 (06) : 3414 - 3424
  • [10] Carbon Dioxide Capture and Storage: Issues and Prospects
    de Coninck, Heleen
    Benson, Sally M.
    ANNUAL REVIEW OF ENVIRONMENT AND RESOURCES, VOL 39, 2014, 39 : 243 - 270