May 5, 2008
Greenpeace report labels carbon capture 'false hope'

Coal operators and their supporters are offering the public false hope when they promote pumping carbon dioxide underground to solve the global climate change problem, a new report from an environmental group says.

Carbon capture and sequestration, or CCS, is expensive and risky, wastes energy and cannot deliver greenhouse pollution reductions in time, according to the report being issued today by the international group Greenpeace.

"Carbon capture and storage is a scam," said the report's author, Emily Rochon, climate and energy campaigner at Greenpeace International. "It is the ultimate coal industry pipe dream."

Greenpeace's report is called "False hope: Why carbon capture and storage won't save the climate." The 44-page document is based on peer-reviewed scientific papers and a host of other research by government agencies, private groups and international organizations.

Research cited includes work by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, Massachusetts Institute for Technology, federal government laboratories and papers published in the journals Science, Environmental Science and Technology, and Geology.

Among the conclusions:

  • Adequate technology is not expected to be commercially available until 2030, while leading climate experts say carbon dioxide emissions need to level off by 2015 to avoid the most severe impacts of climate change.
  • Coal-fired plant capacity is expanding so rapidly that as much as 70 percent of carbon dioxide emissions from electricity generation in 2050 may not be technically suited for carbon capture and storage.
  • Carbon capture and storage has not been tested at a scale needed for full-sized power plants, and designers of newly proposed plants have failed to integrate the "capture" equipment needed.
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