The science of CCS | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.1 | 
                        Given that fossil fuels will continue to play a  substantial role in power generation in the 21st century, CCS  has the potential to be a significant component of global greenhouse gas  mitigation strategies.                           | 
                      
                      
                      
                        | 3.2 | 
                        The principal source of anthropogenic CO2  emissions is the burning of fossil fuels to produce energy in small sources,  such as cars and residential furnaces, and in large stationary sources such as  combustion for the production of electricity.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.3 | 
                        While the proposed primary application of CCS  is power plants, CCS could also be applied  to energy intensive industrial processes.1 Globally, power stations emit 10.5 billion tonnes of CO2 annually;  industrial processes emit less than three billion tonnes.2                          | 
                      
                      
                      
                        | 3.4 | 
                        CCS comprises  three broadly defined stages: 
                      - CO2 separation and capture at the  source;
 
                          - transportation of CO2 to the storage  site; and
 
                           - long term storage of the CO2, largely  in an underground geological facility or a depleted oil or gas field, for  thousands of years.
 
  | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.5 | 
                        The science of separating, capturing and  sequestering CO2 is generally well understood. As the South  Australian Government explained: 
                          While the capture of CO2 for carbon geosequestration  ... is a relatively new concept, CO2 capture for commercial markets  has been practi[s]ed here in Australia  as well as overseas for many years. In Australia, CO2 capture for  commercial markets occurs at natural gas wells and ammonia manufacturing plants  ... In North America, CO2 capture at power plants ... has been  practi[s]ed at some plants since the late 1970s, with the capturing of CO2  being used for [EOR]. Furthermore, such is the confidence in the feasibility of  this technology it is understood that a number of applications for Low Emission  Technology Demonstration Fund (LETDF) grants have been submitted to the Federal  Government for the capture and geosequestration of CO2 gas.3                          | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.6  | 
                        Some comparatively large scale separation,  capture and sequestering systems are currently employed in the natural gas  industry and for the purposes of EOR. EOR consists of injecting CO2  into an oilfield where it mixes with the oil to bring more oil to the surface.  | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.7 | 
                        Norway’s  Sleipner natural gas project removes CO2 in order to purify the gas  stream for commercial sale. The project has injected a million tonnes of CO2  a year since 1996 into a saline aquifer 900 metres below the North   Sea. Project operators, Statoil, state that: 
                          It represents a relatively expensive approach. Generally  speaking, a coal–or gas–fired power station which converted to this disposal  method would see its costs rise by 50-80 per cent. 
                             
                          However, the Sleipner   West licensees would have to pay NOK  1 million [$203 000] per day in Norwegian carbon dioxide tax had they released  the greenhouse gas to the air. 
                        Injecting  the carbon dioxide costs about the same and the solution is more  environmentally friendly.4                           | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.8 | 
                        The Weyburn   EOR project uses CO2 captured  from a coal gasification project in North Dakota  and transports it by pipeline 330 kilometres to Canada’s  Weyburn Field for EOR. The Weyburn project will store 30 million tonnes of CO2  over its proposed 20 year lifetime.5                             | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.9 | 
                        A great deal of confidence is being expressed  about CCS technology. Some of this  confidence is based on CCS operations in the  natural gas sector with EOR. CCS has, however,  not yet been applied at a large coal-based power plant.6 Coal is the major fuel stock for power generation worldwide and the stationary  energy sector is the major anthropogenic emitter of CO2 into the  atmosphere. The challenge is to demonstrate CCS  technology in large coal-fired power stations.                            | 
                      
                      
                     
                      
                         | 
                          | 
                      
                      
                        Separation and capture | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.10 | 
                        The first step of CCS is to separate and capture  the CO2 before it is emitted into the atmosphere. There are three  available approaches to separate and capture CO2: 
                        - post-combustion;
 
                          - oxyfuel combustion; and
 
                          - pre-combustion.
 
  | 
                      
                      
                         | 
                          | 
                      
                      
                        Post-combustion | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.11 | 
                        In post-combustion capture technology, CO2  is separated from other flue gases by using a chemical solvent that reacts with  CO2 in an absorption process. Following absorption, the captured CO2  is taken for transportation while the remaining gases, largely water vapour and  nitrogen, are released into the atmosphere.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.12 | 
                        Post-combustion technology is commercially used  to separate CO2 for use in the food and beverage industry. It is  also used in the natural gas industry to separate the CO2 before the  natural gas can be sold. The Sleipner Project, for example, uses  post-combustion technology to remove CO2 from a natural gas stream.7                            | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.13 | 
                        Post-combustion capture has the potential to  capture up to 95 per cent of CO2. It requires considerable energy,  which generates more CO2. With current technology, it is estimated  to reduce a generator’s total electricity output by up to 30 per cent.8                             | 
                      
                      
                      
                      
                        | 3.14 | 
                        Australia’s existing power stations are fuelled by  pulverised coal. There are three levels of air-blown coal generating  technologies using pulverised coal combustion. These are subcritical;  supercritical and ultra-supercritical.  | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.15 | 
                        The differences in the three technologies are  associated with the difference in steam pressure and temperature used in the  combustion process. The higher the pressure and temperature used, the greater  the operating efficiency.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.16 | 
                        Subcritical technology operates at between 33  and 37 per cent efficiency for generating power, while supercritical operates  at between 37 and 40 per cent efficiency. Current research in  ultra-supercritical technology is targeting an increase in efficiency between  44 and 46 per cent. Some estimates are indicating efficiency of up to 55 per  cent is achievable.9                            | 
                      
                      
                         | 
                          | 
                      
                      
                        Oxyfuel combustion | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.17 | 
                        Oxyfuel combustion differs from post-combustion  in that it separates the CO2  by burning the fuel in pure oxygen, rather than air. This eliminates nitrogen  from the resulting flue gas, and produces a high concentration of CO2. The cleaned flue gas consists  mainly of CO2 and  water vapour. Once the vapour condenses, an almost pure CO2 stream is created.  | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.18 | 
                        The oxyfuel combustion process is efficiency  neutral, in that there is a comparable efficiency reduction to the other  combustion capture technologies.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.19 | 
                        Oxyfuel combustion is relatively new and is yet  to be fully demonstrated on a large scale. It has the potential to be  retrofitted to existing coal-fired power stations, although the costs involved  at present are substantial.10                            | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.20 | 
                        The results from small scale demonstration projects  are promising, with nearly all the CO2 being captured. However,  additional gas treatment systems are needed to produce the oxygen and to remove  the sulphur and nitrogen oxides from the pulverised coal, which lowers the net  capture of CO2 to around 90 per cent.11                             | 
                      
                      
                         | 
                          | 
                      
                      
                        Pre-combustion | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.21 | 
                        Pre-combustion separation and capture involves  the removal of CO2 from processed coal before the combustion stage.  A gasifier converts solid fuel into a synthesis gas, which consists primarily  of water and carbon monoxide. The synthesis gas is reacted with steam to  produce CO2 and hydrogen. The CO2 is then separated  through an absorption process and transported for storage. The hydrogen is  combusted in a gas turbine to generate power, resulting in a flue gas  consisting only of water vapour.  | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.22 | 
                        Pre-combustion capture technology is in the  developmental stages for large scale application. It offers the potential for  very clean fossil fuel use and a reduction in capture costs.12 The reduction in capture costs is largely due to the production of a more  concentrated stream of CO2, making the capture process easier.13                             | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.23 | 
                        Pre-combustion capture technology has the  potential to capture up to 95 per cent of CO2. It will require a new  generation of IGCC power plants in which the fuel is first gasified.14 IGCC has the capacity to be far more efficient than a conventional coal‑fired  (pulverised fuel boilers) power station.                             | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.24 | 
                        At the present time, there are only four coal-based  IGCC power plants in operation, located in Spain,  the Netherlands  and the United States.  These IGCC plants are all using separation and capture technology, although not  with CO2.  | 
                      
                      
                         | 
                          | 
                      
                      
                        Australia’s coal-fired energy production | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.25 | 
                        There are 30 coal-fired power stations operating  in mainland Australia.  The total capacity of these coal fired plants is close to 29 000 megawatts  (MW). Twenty two of the plants have a capacity of 500 MW or more. The majority  of the larger capacity plants are more than 20 years old.15                             | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.26 | 
                        All but four of Australia’s  power stations operate using subcritical technology. The other four employ  supercritical technology. The power stations using supercritical technology are  all located in Queensland and  were commissioned after 2000.16                             | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.27 | 
                        The current stock of Australian and  international pulverised coal-fired power plants can only make use of  post-combustion capture technology. In some cases, post-combustion may be able  to be combined with an oxyfuel process to produce a more concentrated stream of  CO2, facilitating more efficient capture.    | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.28 | 
                        Stanwell Corporation told the Committee that,  unless there was an enormous breakthrough in science, the costs associated with  retrofitting post-combustion capture technologies to existing plants would  probably make it more attractive to build a new generation plant from scratch.17                              | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.29 | 
                        BP stated that the only possible candidates for  retrofitting would be those modern coal-fired power plants with supercritical  technology that currently operate at in excess of 40 per cent efficiency. BP  added that it would not be economically feasible to retrofit older plants  operating at around 20 per cent.18                              | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.30 | 
                        Coal-fired  power stations are generally assumed to have a lifespan of 30 to 40 years, so Australia’s power stations may be expected to have  long economic lives.19 If serious cuts in emissions are to be  achieved by 2050, some form of post-combustion capture technology will be  necessary.                              | 
                      
                      
                         | 
                          | 
                      
                      
                        Transport                         | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.31 | 
                        Once separated from other gases and compressed,  the CO2 can be transported to the site of storage by pipelines,  road, ship or rail.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.32 | 
                        Evidence to the inquiry has indicated that  transport of the captured CO2 by pipeline is a relatively  straightforward procedure. It is a well established practice in the chemical  and petroleum industries and is analogous to the transportation of natural gas.20                             | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.33 | 
                        However, CSIRO draws attention to the need for  more research in the area of transportation: 
                          Materials research may show how costs can be reduced but at the  moment, transport is receiving little attention in Australia  and overseas compared to other aspects of geosequestration.21                             | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.34 | 
                        Further research into the issue of transportation  is required, particularly to ascertain which distances make transport options  economical.   | 
                      
                      
                         | 
                          | 
                      
                      
                        Storage and monitoring | 
                      
                      
                        Geological storage options | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.35 | 
                        The options for long term geological storage  include: 
                        - saline aquifers;
 
                          - depleted gas and oil fields;
 
                          - unmineable coal seams;
 
                          - injecting into existing oil and gas reservoirs  to enhance recovery;
 
                          - injecting into coal bed methane reserves to  extract the methane; and
 
                          - injecting into other geological formations such  as basalts, oil shales and cavities.22
                              | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.36 | 
                        Commercial experience in the geological storage  of CO2, mostly for the purposes of EOR or gas recovery, is  considerable.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.37 | 
                        According to the IPCC: 
                          The injection of CO2 in deep geological formations  involves many of the same technologies that have been developed in the oil and  gas exploration and production industry. Well drilling technology, injection  technology, computer simulation of storage reservoir dynamics and monitoring  methods from existing applications are being developed further for design and  operation of geological storage.23                             | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.38 | 
                        BP told the Committee that around 35 million  tonnes of CO2 a year is injected into geological formations around  the world.24 Predominately this is for EOR. There are, for example, over 144 sites in the United    States using this process. There are no EOR  activities in Australia.25                             | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.39 | 
                        The gas recovery plans of the Gorgon Project in Western    Australia involve injecting CO2 in a deep  saline aquifer rather than back into the depleted gas reservoir.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.40 | 
                        While CO2  storage in depleted oil and gas reservoirs is deployed overseas, CO2  storage in saline formations, porous sandstone rocks, are considered to be the  most promising location for long-term underground storage of CO2. CSIRO,  universities and other parties working through the CO2CRC are currently engaged in cooperative  research on the use of saline aquifers for long-term, permanent storage.26                              | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.41 | 
                        Studies indicate that deep saline aquifers  represent 94 per cent of Australia’s  feasible geological storage capacity.27                              | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.42 | 
                        Conservative estimates have put Australia’s  total capacity of all storage options at 740 billion tonnes of CO2. The  potential capacity of oil and gas fields in Australia  has been estimated at 14 000 million tonnes CO2.28 At the same time,  oil and gas field sites may be unsuitable or unavailable for many years to  come, as high prices have extended the economic lives of the fields.29 | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.43 | 
                        Storage of CO2 in unmineable coal  deposits represents another alternative  geological storage option. The CSIRO notes that there may be benefits  associated with storage in unmineable coal seams—namely lower drilling costs as  the CO2 can be stored in shallower wells with the possibility of  natural gas (methane) production in some cases to offset the cost.30                             | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.44 | 
                        These benefits need to be put in the context of  lower storage capacity as the ability to accept large volumes of CO2 is reduced in comparison to  porous sandstone.31                             | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.45 | 
                        CO2 can be adsorbed onto the  extensive internal surface of coal.32 This may be of importance in regions where there are not suitable deep saline  reserves to store the CO2. In New South Wales possibilities may  exist to inject the CO2 from black coal-fired power stations into  nearby sites to recover methane gas.33 | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.46 | 
                        The Geological Disposal of Carbon (GEODISC)  programme (1999-2003) established under the Australian Petroleum Cooperative  Research Centre (APCRC) reviewed all of the Australian sedimentary basins for  their geological sequestration options.34 The study produced three storage estimates: 
                          - Total ‘Theoretical’ capacity of 740 Gt CO2, equivalent to 1600 years of  current emissions, but with no economic barriers considered;
 
  - ‘Realistic’ capacity of 100–115 million tonnes  CO2 per year (or 25 per cent of our annual emissions), determined by  matching sources with the closest viable storage sites and assuming economic  incentives for storage; and
 
  - ‘Cost curve’ capacity of 20-180 million tonnes  CO2 per year with increasing storage capacity depending on future CO2  values.35
                       | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.47 | 
                        Theoretical capacity does not account for  locality issues or critical economic and technical barriers. A more realistic  approach is to consider the proximity of the sources of CO2 to  suitable storage sites. According to CO2CRC: 
                          
                          …our  preliminary assessments suggest that most existing emission “nodes”, such as  the Latrobe Valley,  the Burrup Peninsula,  Kwinana, southeast Queensland  and Gladstone-Rockhampton, will have adequate storage capacity located within  200-500 km.36                           | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.48 | 
                        The least explored state in terms of storage is  NSW, partly because there has been little oil exploration in this state and  little is understood about its deep geology.37 The CO2CRC hopes to undertake a program of storage assessment in the  Newcastle-Sydney region in the near future.38                             | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.49 | 
                        Assessing sources of CO2 with  proximate sequestration sites, the Australian Government has submitted that: 
                          …the  major emission sources (power plants) for Australia  are located within the major coal provinces. Whilst the offshore  Gippsland Basin  has excellent reservoirs and is immediately adjacent to the potential major  emissions from the brown coal sources in the Latrobe Valley  (11% of Australia’s  total emissions), it will require significant capital investment to establish  infrastructure and pipe CO2 into an offshore environment. Similarly,  whilst the North West Shelf has very good reservoirs, it is very distant from  the largest emission sources which are on the east coast. The North West Shelf  will however provide many opportunities for the potential emissions from the  high CO2 gas fields located in the Carnarvon and Browse Basins  (potentially equivalent to 4% of Australia’s  total annual emissions). In southeast Queensland in  the Bowen Basin  the reservoirs are marginal due to the low permeability, but the sources (9% of  Australia’s  total annual emissions) are within 250 km of potential storage sites and they  are both in an onshore environment. In the Sydney Basin  region, despite having large emission sources (15% of Australia’s  total annual emissions), the geological characteristics of the reservoirs (no  permeability) precludes any significant likelihood of large scale injection or  storage of CO2.39  | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.50 | 
                        Santos Limited raised the possibility of  utilising a centralised storage site: 
                          …the  Cooper Basin is  centrally located between the major carbon dioxide emission sources of  Gladstone-Rockhampton, Brisbane-Tarong, Newcastle-Sydney-Wollongong and Adelaide.  The depleted oil and gas reservoirs of the Cooper Basin  provide an effective means to develop a central geosequestration facility to  service these centres, not withstanding transportation distances, the cost of  which would be borne by a carbon price on emissions.40  | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.51 | 
                        A 2005 CO2CRC study, initiated by Monash Energy and funded  by the Australian Government (Department of Transport and Regional Services)  and the CO2CRC, proposed the establishment of a central CO2  capture facility, or ‘low emission hub’, in the La Trobe Valley region. Compressed  CO2 from the facility would then be transported for storage by  pipeline offshore to the nearby Gippsland oil fields.41                              | 
                      
                      
                         | 
                          | 
                      
                      
                        Committee comment                        | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.52 | 
                        The viability of CCS depends on finding suitable  long term and secure storage sites within reasonable distance from the major  stationary energy hubs. One area warranting further examination is the  Wollongong-Sydney-Newcastle region, particularly as there is limited knowledge  about its deep geology.  | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.53 | 
                        It is  encouraging that the CO2CRC plans to undertake a storage assessment of the  Newcastle-Sydney region in the near future. Research being conducted by the  CSIRO, through the CO2CRC, can also be expected to increase the number  of sites suitable for permanent geosequestration in saline aquifers.42                              | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.54 | 
                        Having found suitable sites, it is then  incumbent on the Australian and State Governments to fully test these sites by  undertaking storage demonstration trials similar to the one already underway in  the Otway Basin, Victoria.   | 
                      
                      
                      
                        |   | 
                        Recommendation 1The Committee recommends that the Australian  Government provide  funding to the CSIRO to progress research being conducted through the CO2CRC to assess the storage  potential for permanent CO2 geosequestration in sedimentary basins  in New South Wales, particularly the off-shore Sydney Basin, and the economic  viability of these sites.   | 
                      
                      
                         | 
                          | 
                      
                      
                        Other forms of storage | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.55 | 
                        There are two other forms of storage that have  been identified as potentially suitable to store CO2, although both  remain relatively untested.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.56 | 
                        Deep ocean storage may be an option as CO2,  when deposited into the sea floor below 3 000 metres, becomes denser than water  and will remain in situ through geomechanical disturbances.43 Another option is mineral carbonation, which occurs naturally when CO2  combines with minerals to form solid carbonate.44 The Carbon Safe Alliance proposed this alternative form based on turning CO2  into carbonates which could then be used to manufacture a range of by-products.45                             | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.57 | 
                        Both deep ocean storage and mineral carbonation  are alternate storage options. However neither technology has been broadly  demonstrated. Deep ocean storage is not regarded as ready to be applied, and  doubts have also been raised about its environmental viability as a mitigation  option. Similarly mineral carbonation is untested on a large scale and is  widely regarded as not an economically viable option.46                              | 
                      
                      
                         | 
                          | 
                      
                      
                        Monitoring and verification | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.58 | 
                        Effective and accurate technologies to measure  and monitor CO2 storage are essential for the purposes of  regulation, carbon accounting and public safety.47                            | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.59 | 
                        Most importantly, a risk assessment for all CCS  sites must be carried out before storage can commence. This must apply to both  engineered and natural storage systems. The criteria for selection will also need  to be agreed in conjunction with the relevant regulatory authorities.48                              | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.60 | 
                        Monitoring can be done by way of remote sensing,  seismic, microseismic, petrophysical well logs and geophysical sampling.49  In addition, prior to injecting, baseline surveys need to be done to assess any  existing levels of CO2.                             | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.61 | 
                        Evidence to the Committee emphasised the  importance of establishing good baseline data and knowledge of natural  variation in CO2 levels.50 Additionally, the need for post injection regulation and monitoring was  emphasised. There is currently no consistent  national, nor international, regulatory framework for CO2 injection  and storage.51                            | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.62 | 
                        Monitoring and verification is critical to the acceptability  and success of any geosequestration operation. In particular, the public will  need to be fully satisfied that the storage site is secure and safe and that any  changes to those conditions can be immediately detected and acted on.  | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.63 | 
                        The IPCC special report on CCS concluded that  for any given storage site, one could assume that there will be a 99 per cent  probability the site will remain stable and safe for at least 1 000 years.52 This view was supported by the CO2CRC which  stated: 
                          Modelling  has shown that with time, the CO2-rich  water becomes progressively denser which causes downward fingering of the  denser CO2-rich waters. Mineral trapping involves the reaction of CO2  with unstable minerals present in the host formation to form stable, solid  compounds such as carbonates. Once the CO2 has formed such minerals  it is permanently locked. A key point about both of these mechanisms is that  they ensure that over time the CO2 becomes progressively more stable  and even more unlikely to leak out of the storage formation.53  | 
                      
                      
                         | 
                          | 
                      
                      
                        Conclusion | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.64 | 
                        Much of  the science which forms the basis for CCS is understood. It is being applied on  a small scale at various sites around the world, including in Australia. The three stages of CCS (separation and  capture, transportation, and storage) remain at different points of development  and will require greater research and experimental application before CCS  becomes a truly viable greenhouse gas mitigation strategy.  | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.65 | 
                        There is  a consensus that all three technologies (post-combustion, oxyfuel and  pre-combustion) should be pursued, to be applied in different circumstances. In  particular, there is agreement that governments should not attempt to pick  technology winners. As a recent Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) report  on the future of coal, notes: 
                          At present [IGCC] is the leading candidate for electricity  production with CO2 capture because it is estimated to have lower  cost than pulverised coal with capture; however neither IGCC nor other coal  technologies have been demonstrated with CCS… 
                             
                          Approaches other than IGCC could prove attractive with further  technology development, for example, oxygen fired pulverised coal combustion,  especially with lower quality coals…The reality is that the diversity of coal  type…imply different operating conditions for any application and multiple  technologies will likely be deployed.54                           | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.66 | 
                        The 2006 UK House of Commons report on CCS  similarly concludes that all three capture options offer potential advantages  and should be pursued.55                             | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.67 | 
                        There are a range of views on the suitability of  each of these technologies, particularly in the Australian context. There is  some agreement that post‑combustion capture is the process most applicable to Australia’s  current stock of power stations. There is also general agreement that the focus  of research and development should be on the technologies that can be applied  to the existing power stations.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.68 | 
                        However, there are those who consider that IGCC would be a more viable  option due to the high cost of post-combustion capture.56 Some, such as Rio Tinto, expressed concern to the Committee that  post-combustion capture can result in a loss of energy output and therefore  could further reduce the efficiency of existing, low efficiency power plants.57                            | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.69 | 
                        The transport of captured carbon raises another  set of issues. As noted in this report, transporting captured CO2 by pipeline should be relatively straightforward  given previous experience in the chemical and petroleum industries. That being  said, there is a need for greater research into the issues of transporting  captured CO2, especially economically viable options.  | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.70 | 
                        Commercial experience in the storage of captured  CO2 is considerable. CO2 is injected into geological  formations around the world each year. In particular, there is an existing body  of knowledge about the injection and storage of CO2 during, and as a consequence of, EOR;  however, less is known about CO2 storage in saline formations. These  represent 94 per cent of Australia’s  feasible permanent geological storage capacity.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.71 | 
                        As with  transport, issues relating to the storage of CO2 in Australia will need to be more thoroughly researched,  including to develop effective and accurate technologies to measure and monitor  CO2 storage.  | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.72 | 
                        While a  great deal of confidence is being expressed about CCS technology, there are no  major projects currently underway to demonstrate the integration of  technologies with coal-fired power plants. This integration of available  technologies, to best suit the Australian context, needs to be demonstrated.  | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.73 | 
                        This observation was highlighted in the House of  Commons report on the Role of Carbon Capture and Storage, published on 9 February 2006: 
                          Most of the technology is already known and available but there  is a lack of experience in integrating the component technologies in single  projects at the scale required. Multiple full scale demonstration projects  using different types of capture technology and storage conditions are urgently  needed.58                             | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.74 | 
                        Much of  the injection technology is already known and available but there is a lack of  experience in integrating the component technologies in single projects at the commercial  scale required, and in the Australian context. Multiple full scale  demonstration projects using different types of capture technology and storage  conditions are urgently needed.59                             | 
                      
                      
                        | 3.75 | 
                        More research and development is required across  a range of applications, under varying conditions and on a scale that would  demonstrate commercial viability. There are projects underway in Australia,  some of which are designed to address, in part, these concerns. The next  chapter will discuss Australian projects in greater detail.  | 
                      
	   
  
                       
                       
                           
						   
                             
                               | 1 | 
                               Energy intensive industrial processes  include oil refining, steel and cement production. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 2 | 
                               IPCC, Special  Report on Carbon Dioxide Capture and Storage: Summary for Policy Makers and Technical  Summary, 2005, p. 20. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 3 | 
                               South Australian Government, Submission No. 5, p. 2. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 4 | 
                               Statoil: Topics, Carbon Dioxide Storage Prized,   <www.statoil.com>, accessed 29 May 2007. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 5 | 
                               United States Department of Energy, Successful Sequestration and Enhanced Oil  Recovery Project Could Mean More Oil and Less CO2 Emissions, Office of  Public Affairs Media Release, 15   November 2005, <www.energy.gov/print/2673.htm>, accessed 29 May 2007. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 6 | 
                               A large power plant is generally defined  as having a capacity of 500 megawatts (MW) or above. Mr A. Zapantis, Rio  Tinto, Transcript of Evidence, 26 February 2007, p. 9. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 7 | 
                               House of Commons, Science and Technology  Committee, Meeting the UK Energy and Climate Needs: the Role of Carbon  Capture and Storage, First Report of Session 2005–06, Volume 1, p.  15. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 8 | 
                               CSIRO, Submission  No. 10, p. 3; Mr T. Daly, Centre for Energy and Environmental Markets, Transcript of Evidence, 30 October 2006,  p. 6. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 9 | 
                               Australian Coal Association, Clean Coal  Technology in Australia, <http://www.australiancoal.com.au/cleantechAus.htm>,  accessed 7 June 2007; ABARE research report 06.1, Technical Development and Economic Growth: the Inaugural Ministerial  Meeting of the Asia Pacific Partnership on Clean Development and Climate,  Sydney, January 2006, p. 51. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 10 | 
                               Mr M.   O’Neill, Australian Coal Association, Transcript of Evidence 27 November 2006, p. 6. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 11 | 
                               UNEP, Can  Carbon Dioxide Storage Help Cut Greenhouse Emissions? A Simplified Guide to the IPCC’s “Special Report on Carbon dioxide  Capture and Storage”, April 2006, p. 4. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 12 | 
                               Australian Government, Submission No. 41, Attachment C, p. 2. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 13 | 
                               CO2CRC, Submission No. 36, p. 7. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 14 | 
                               CSIRO, Submission  No. 10, p. 3. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 15 | 
                               ESAA, Electricity  Gas Australia 2006, Appendix 1, pp. 51–61. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 16 | 
                               ESAA, Electricity  Gas Australia 2006, Appendix 1, pp. 51–61. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 17 | 
                               Stanwell Corporation, Transcript of Evidence, 11   September 2006, p. 17. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 18 | 
                               Dr T. Espie, BP United    Kingdom, Transcript  of Evidence, 30 October 2006,  p. 16. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 19 | 
                               Clean Energy Future Group, A Clean Energy Future for Australia,  March 2004, p. 151; and Australian Government, Submission No. 41, p. 13. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 20 | 
                               Australian Government, Submission No. 41, pp. 10-11. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 21 | 
                               CSIRO, Submission  No. 10, p. 4. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 22 | 
                               CO2CRC, Submission No. 36, p. 10. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 23 | 
                               IPCC, Special  Report on Carbon Dioxide Capture and Storage: Summary for Policy Makers and  Technical Summary, 2005, p. 28. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 24 | 
                               Dr T. Espie, BP United    Kingdom, Transcript  of Evidence, 30th October 2006,  pp. 13-14. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 25 | 
                               Australian Government, Submission, No. 41, Attachment B, p. 9; CSIRO, Submission No. 10, p. 5. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 26 | 
                               CSIRO, Submission  No. 10, p. 4. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 27 | 
                               J.   Bradshaw, et al, Australia’s CO2  Geological Storage Potential and Matching of Emission Sources to Potential  Sinks, <www.co2crc.com.au/PRINTFRIENDLY/SciencePubsPrint.html>,  accessed 29 May 2006. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 28 | 
                               Australian Government, Submission, No. 41, p. 12; Attachment D,  p. 9. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 29 | 
                                Australian Government, Submission, No. 41, Attachment D, p. 9. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 30 | 
                                CSIRO, Submission  No. 10, p. 6. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 31 | 
                               CSIRO, Submission  No. 10, p. 6. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 32 | 
                               CSIRO, Submission  No. 10, p. 6. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 33 | 
                               CO2CRC, Submission No. 36, p. 11. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 34 | 
                               Australian Government, Submission No. 41, p. 11. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 35 | 
                               Australian Government, Submission No. 41, p. 12. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 36 | 
                               CO2CRC, Submission No. 36, pp. 18; 19. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 37 | 
                               CO2CRC, Submission No. 36, p. 18. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 38 | 
                               CO2CRC, Submission No. 36, p. 19. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 39 | 
                               Australian Government, Submission No. 41, Attachment D, p. 13. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 40 | 
                               Santos Limited, Submission No. 25, p. 4. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 41 | 
                               CO2CRC, Submission No. 36, p. 16; Anglo Coal Australia  and Monash Energy, Submission No. 24,  pp. 8, 12, 20. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 42 | 
                               CSIRO, Submission No. 10, pp.4–5;  CO2CRC, Submission No. 36, p. 19. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 43 | 
                               IPCC, Special  Report on Carbon Dioxide Capture and Storage: Summary for Policy Makers and  Technical Summary, 2005, pp. 6–7; Docklands   Science Park, Submission No. 18, pp. 2; 5 Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 44 | 
                               IPCC, Special  Report on Carbon Dioxide Capture and Storage: Summary for Policy Makers and  Technical Summary, 2005, p. 7. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 45 | 
                               The Carbonsafe Alliance, Submission No. 38, Appendix 1, pp. 11–12. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 46 | 
                                CO2CRC, Submission No. 36, p. 4. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 47 | 
                               CSIRO, Submission No. 10, p. 6. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 48 | 
                               CO2CRC, Submission No. 36, p. 11. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 49 | 
                               CO2CRC, Submission No. 36, p. 11. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 50 | 
                               CanSyd Australia  and Auspace Limited, Submission No. 9, passim. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 51 | 
                               CanSyd Australia  and Auspace Limited, Submission No. 9,  p. 4; UNEP, Can Carbon Dioxide Storage  Help Cut Greenhouse Emissions? A  Simplified Guide to the IPCC’s “Special Report on Carbon dioxide Capture and  Storage”, April 2006, p. 16. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 52 | 
                               UNEP, Can  Carbon Dioxide Storage Help Cut Greenhouse Emissions? A Simplified Guide to the IPCC’s “Special Report on Carbon dioxide  Capture and Storage”, April 2006, p. 16. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 53 | 
                               CO2CRC, Submission No. 36, p. 11. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 54 | 
                               MIT, Executive Summary, Future of Coal : Options for a Carbon Constrained World,  2007, p. xiii, <web.mit.edu/coal/The_Future_of_Coal.pdf>, accessed 5 June 2007. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 55 | 
                               House of Commons, Science and Technology Committee, Meeting UK Energy and Climate Needs: The  Role of Carbon Capture and Storage, First Report, Session 2005-06, Volume  1, 2006, p. 16. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 56 | 
                               Mr J. Boshier, National Generators Forum  (NGF), Transcript of Evidence, 4 December 2006, p. 4. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 57 | 
                               Mr A. Zantpantis, Rio  Tinto, Transcript of Evidence, 26 February 2007, p. 7. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 58 | 
                               House of Commons, Science and Technology  Committee, Meeting UK Energy and Climate  Needs: The Role of Carbon Capture and Storage, First Report, Session  2005-06, Volume 1, 2006, Summary, p. 3. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 59 | 
                               Mr G. Humphrys, Stanwell Corporation Ltd, Transcript of Evidence, 11 September 2006,  p. 3. Back |