Biomass energy with carbon capture and storage (BECCS or Bio-CCS)

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

Authors

In terms of climate mitigation options, the theoretical potential of biomass energy with carbon capture and storage (BECCS) is substantial; introducing the prospect of negative emissions, it offers the vision of drawing atmospheric CO 2 concentrations back down to pre-industrial levels. This paper reviews issues raised at a workshop on BECCS, convened in Scotland in late 2009. Presentations by bioenergy and CCS specialists covered topics including the climate policy rationale for BECCS, global biomass CCS potential, the UK potential for BECCS, the risk of fossil fuel lock-in via coal co-fi ring, and carbon market issues. In practice, the scale of the forestry and accessible CCS infrastructure required are among the obstacles to the large-scale deployment of BECCS in the near term. While biomass co-fi ring with coal offers an early route to BECCS, a quite substantial (>20%) biomass component may be necessary to achieve negative emissions in a co-fi red CCS system. Smaller scale BECCS, through co-location of dedicated or co-combusted biomass on fossil CCS CO 2 transport pipeline routes, is easier to envisage and would be potentially less problematic. Hence, we judge that BECCS can, and likely will, play a role in carbon reduction, but care needs to be taken not to exaggerate its potential, given that (i) there are few studies of the cost of connecting bio-processing (combustion, gasifi cation or other) infrastructure with CO 2 storage sites and (ii) that scenarios of global bioenergy potential remain contentious.

Original languageEnglish
JournalGreenhouse Gases: Science and Technology
Volume1
Issue number4
Pages (from-to)324-334
Number of pages11
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 12.2011
Externally publishedYes

DOI

Recently viewed

Publications

  1. Utilization of organic residues using heterotrophic microalgae and insects
  2. machine/readable. Reflextions upon the ›knowledge‹ of images
  3. The Timing of Daily Demand for Goods and Services
  4. Characterization of the Basic Types of Lunar Highland Breccias by Quantitative Textural Analysis
  5. Coauthoring collaborative strategy when voices are many and authority is ambiguous
  6. Bright Spots for Local WFD Implementation Through Collaboration with Nature Conservation Authorities?
  7. Missiology: An Introduction to the Foundations, History, and Strategies of World Missions
  8. Constructing Audiences, Defining Art
  9. iTaukei ways of knowing and managing mangroves for ecosystem-based adaptation
  10. The effects of an active development of the mental model in the training process
  11. Sustainable Development and Material Flows
  12. Self-regulated learning with a text-highlighting strategy a training experiment
  13. Towards a socio-cognitive approach to knowledge transfer
  14. Belief in Free Will Is Related to Internal Attribution in Self-Perception
  15. The end of certainties
  16. States and traits
  17. Where pragmatics and dialectology meet
  18. Study of digital morphing tools in the architectural design process
  19. Towards a thick understanding of sustainability transitions - Linking transition management, capabilities and social practices
  20. Integration of Sustainability into Universities - Good Practices and Benchmarking for Integration
  21. Watch out, pothole! Featuring Road Damage Detection in an End-to-end System for Autonomous Driving
  22. Towards a Real-world Laboratory
  23. A directional modification of the Levkovitch-Svendsen cross-hardening model based on the stress deviator
  24. Live Sports, Piracy and Uncertainty: Understanding Illegal Streaming Aggregation Platforms
  25. Response of saproxylic beetles to small-scale habitat connectivity depends on trophic levels