Introduction | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.1 | 
                        There is a consensus that taking action on  climate change will have a cost impact on the global economy. The IPCC’s Fourth  Assessment Report estimates that if the world is to stabilise greenhouse gas emissions  between 535-590 parts per million (ppm)1 CO2-e, this will result in a global median Gross Domestic Product  (GDP) reduction of 0.6 per cent in 2030.2 The Stern Review estimates the annual cost of reducing total greenhouse gas  emissions, to a level consistent with a 550ppm CO2-e stabilisation  level by 2050, will range from between -1.0 to +3.5 per cent of GDP. That is,  an average of around 1 per cent of GDP each year now and for the foreseeable  future.3                            | 
                      
                      
                      
                        | 6.2 | 
                        There is also general agreement that the costs  of addressing climate change will be less if CCS is included in the suite of mitigation  strategies.4 If  CCS is not included in the mix, then other, potentially more expensive  technologies will have to be utilised to reduce CO2 emissions. The IPCC estimates that, in the long term,  including CCS in the range of mitigation strategies will reduce the cost of  stabilising CO2 by upwards of 30 per cent.5                            | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.3 | 
                        In the Australian context, ABARE estimates that  if early action, including CCS, is taken to abate climate change, Australia’s  GDP in 2050 will be 2.5 per cent less than its projected GDP under a “business  as usual” scenario. Without CCS in the mix, ABARE predicts that carbon  abatement will reduce our 2050 GDP a further 0.7 per cent, falling to a total  of 3.2 per cent.6                             | 
                      
                      
                      
                        | 6.4 | 
                        CO2CRC  modelling suggests a similar scenario. Their findings indicate that, to achieve  carbon mitigation without CCS, it will cost  the Australian economy about $2 billion a year more than if CCS  is deployed. This is premised on predictions that the cost of avoiding CO2  emissions will reduce by 30 per cent over time and that CCS  will be able to store 140 million tonnes (approximately half) of Australia’s  total stationary CO2-e emissions per year.7                              | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.5 | 
                        By contrast, Greenpeace Australia  notes that the cost CCS poses to Australian power stations is one of the major  flaws of CCS technology. They state that ‘there is no evidence available that  indicates CCS is the most economical mitigation option’.8                            | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.6  | 
                        At this stage, it is extremely difficult to  accurately estimate the costs of CCS. The cost estimates for CCS that are made  are marked by very wide variations.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.7 | 
                        As the Australian Government stated in its  submission:
                          There is no simple answer to the question of how much CCS  costs or what its net economic impact will be (either now or in the future).  This is due to the heterogeneous nature of the technical options available  (including capture and compression; transport; storage), the variability of its  application (e.g. industry sectors and markets; technical options; policy and  regulatory environments); the technical and financial complexity of  integration; and the still largely speculative nature of the risk profiles  being attached to the deployment of these nascent systems by governments and  markets… [Moreover] the sum of the costs of individual components does not  necessarily add up to the overall system cost (mainly due to the energy  penalties of CO2 capture). This suggests …that each CCS  project will have its own unique set of cost estimates and economic impacts.9                            | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.8 | 
                        These issues are compounded by the lack of  commercial-scale, integrated CCS operations worldwide. In its Special Report on Carbon dioxide Capture and  Storage, the IPCC noted that:
                          There is still relatively little experience with the combination  of CO2 capture, transport and storage in a fully integrated CCS  system …CCS has still not been used in large-scale power plants (the application  with most potential).10                            | 
                      
                      
                         | 
                          | 
                      
                      
                        The economic cost of inaction | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.9 | 
                        There are economic costs involved with the  deployment of CCS, however, there are also significant economic costs  associated with taking no action to address greenhouse gas emissions.  | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.10 | 
                        CO2CRC looked at risk from the point of view if no action was taken:
                          Perhaps the greatest, but so far unquantified risk would arise  if we took no action, or inadequate action, to limit greenhouse gas emissions,  resulting in major (and expensive) consequences arising from climate change.11                            | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.11 | 
                        According to the Stern Review, continuing a  “business as usual” approach will pose a major economic risk to the global  economy, costing trillions of dollars:
  …the Review estimates that if we don’t act, the overall costs  and risks of climate change will be equivalent to losing at least 5% of global  GDP each year, now and forever. If a wider range of risks and impacts is taken  into account, the estimates of damage could rise to 20% of global GDP or more.12                            | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.12 | 
                        The Prime Ministerial Task Group on Emissions  Trading notes that ‘without action, there are likely to be increasingly adverse  economic, social and environmental consequences. These risks need to be  managed. They require an economic solution.’13                            | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.13 | 
                        Available research suggests that the Australian  economy could be ‘more adversely affected [by global warming] than other  developed countries’.14 This could be the result of a range of factors—Australia’s  agricultural production is often located in low lying, warm areas and would be  adversely affected by even moderate increases in temperature. Additionally, Australia’s  high rainfall variability means that evaporation is relatively high, therefore  large dam storage capacities are necessary.15                             | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.14 | 
                        It should be noted, however, that conclusions  such as these are based on a limited amount of research. The Australian  Productivity Commission believes that there is a lack of research which ‘systematically  and comprehensively compares the costs and benefits of climate change impact in  Australia with  those in other developed countries.’16                             | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.15 | 
                         Despite  that paucity of research in this area, there are many who are of the opinion  that inaction on climate change will have a detrimental impact on Australian  industry.17                             | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.16 | 
                        For example, the following economic impacts have  been predicted as a result of climate change:
                    - Australia's $32 billion tourist industry is highly climate dependent. A 2-3°C temperature  rise would bleach 97 per cent of the Great Barrier Reef, which supports a tourist industry valued at $1.5 billion;
 
                          - The livestock industry’s $17 billion export  trade would face risks from increased heat stress, disease and pests; and, if  temperatures increase by 2°C, national livestock capacity in native pasture  systems would drop by 40 per cent; and
 
                          - If, as a consequence of reduced water flows,  Australian irrigation allocations were reduced by 20 per cent reduction, Australia’s  GDP would fall by around $750 million in  2009/10.18
                             | 
                      
                      
                         | 
                          | 
                      
                      
                        Cost estimates | 
                      
                      
                        CCS: integrated system | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.17 | 
                        The IPCC has estimated that the cost of  producing a kWh of electricity from a coal-fired power plant (PC and IGCC)  ranges from 4-6 US cent without CCS and from  5-10 US cents with CCS.19 The IPCC estimates that the cost of electricity, with CCS  at a pulverised coal station, would increase by between 43 and 91 per cent. At  an IGCC power plant that increase would be between 21 and 78 per cent.20                            | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.18 | 
                        Table 6.1 sets out the range of cost estimates  (in US$) for PC and IGCC plants with CCS.                           | 
                      
                      
                         
                    Table 6.1 Cost  Variations in Applying CCS to a Range   of Power Plants 
                             
                        
                          
                            
                              Plant performance & cost parameters   | 
                              Pulverized Coal  | 
                              IGCC  | 
                             
                            
                              Reference plant without CCS 
                                Cost of electricity    (US$/kWh)  | 
                              0.043 - 0.052  | 
                              0.041 – 0.061  | 
                             
                            
                              Power plant with capture  | 
                                 | 
                                 | 
                             
                            
                              Increased fuel    requirement (%)  | 
                              24 – 40  | 
                              14 – 25  | 
                             
                            
                              CO2 captured (kg/kWh)  | 
                              0.82  -0.97  | 
                              0.67 – 0.94  | 
                             
                            
                              CO2 avoided (kg/kWh)  | 
                              00.62 – 0.70  | 
                              0.59 – 0.73  | 
                             
                            
                              %CO2 avoided  | 
                              81 – 88  | 
                              81 – 91  | 
                             
                            
                              Power with CCS  | 
                                 | 
                                 | 
                             
                            
                              Cost of electricity    (US$/kWh)  | 
                              0.063 – 0.099  | 
                              0.055 – 0.091  | 
                             
                            
                              Cost of CCS    (US$/kWh)  | 
                              0.019 – 0.047  | 
                              0.010 – 0.032  | 
                             
                            
                              % increase in COE  | 
                              43 – 91  | 
                              21 - 78  | 
                             
                            
                              Mitigation cost    (US$/tonne CO2    avoided)  | 
                              30 - 71  | 
                              14 - 53  | 
                             
                           
                          
                          Source: Compiled  from: IPCC, Special Report on Carbon Dioxide Capture and Storage, Technical  Report,p.40. 
                           
                           | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.19 | 
                        The British House of Commons report estimated  that producing a kWh of electricity at a coal-fired power station (PC and IGCC)  without CCS would be approximately 2.6 GB  pence. With CCS it would cost approximately  3.7 GB pence.21 On  the basis of these cost estimates, the House of Commons report states that ‘the  cost of electricity generation using CCS  seems to be comparable with, or even less than, published costs from other  carbon abatement or low carbon technologies such as nuclear or renewables’.22                            | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.20 | 
                        In Australia,  the cost of a kWh of electricity from a coal-fired power station is between  3.1-4.0 Australian cents.23 This is less than the cost of electricity production estimated by the IPCC and  the British House of Commons report, (4-6 US cents and 2.6 GB pence) because  coal is cheaper in Australia.24 Australian Government figures estimate that the cost of producing a kWh of  electricity from a new pulverised coal power station with capture is between 8 Australian  cents and 10.6 Australian cents,25 and an average cost of between A$5 and A$45 per tonne of CO2  transported. Table 6.2 illustrates the predicted costs for transporting CO2  in US$.                           | 
                      
                      
                         
                    Table 6.2 Indicative  CO2 Transport Costs  in USD per tonne 
                             
                        
                          
                            
                              Distance  | 
                              Average costs 
                                      US$t/CO2  | 
                             
                            
                              Under 50km  | 
                              1  | 
                             
                            
                              50 – 200km  | 
                              4  | 
                             
                            
                              200 – 500km  | 
                              6  | 
                             
                            
                              500 – 2000km  | 
                              12  | 
                             
                            
                              Over 2000km  | 
                              35  | 
                             
                           
                          Source: Compiled  from: ABARE,  eReport 05.1, Near Zero Emission  Technologies, January 2005, p. 20.  
                        
  | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.21 | 
                        The Australian Government submission also notes  that ABARE presents a general estimated cost for storage and on-going monitoring,  calculating average costs to be anywhere between A$1 and A$17 per tonne of CO2.26                            | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.22 | 
                        Table 6.3 summarises the IPCC’s cost estimates  for storage under various conditions: those for ocean storage [that is CO2 stored at an ocean depth of  3000m] include the cost of transport by pipeline, thereby accounting for some  of the cost variations between the two sources. Such cost variables are  discussed in greater detail later in the chapter.                            | 
                      
                      
                         
                        Table 6.3 CCS  Cost Breakdown: Storage and Monitoring 
                             
                        
                          
                            
                              | CCS system components | 
                              Cost Range 
                                      US$/tonne CO2  | 
                                 | 
                             
                            
                              Storage  | 
                                 | 
                                 | 
                             
                            
                              Geological  | 
                              0.5 – 8.0  | 
                              Excludes EOR or    ECBM*  | 
                             
                            
                              Ocean storage –    pipeline  | 
                              6.0 – 31.0  | 
                              Range represents 100-500km distance offshore and 3000m    depth. **  | 
                             
                            
                              Ocean storage –    ship/platform  | 
                              12 - 16  | 
                              Range represents 100-500km distance offshore and 3000m    depth. **  | 
                             
                            
                              Geological    Monitoring & Verification  | 
                              0.10 – 0.30***  | 
                                 | 
                             
                           
                          Source: Compiled  from: IPCC Special Report on Carbon Dioxide Capture and Storage, p. 346. 
                           
                          *  EOR refers to Enhanced Oil Recovery and ECBM refers to Enhanced Coal Bed Methane  recovery 
                          **  Includes offshore transportation costs 
                          ***Source IPCC Special  Report on Carbon Dioxide Capture and Storage, Summary for Policy Makers and  Technical Summary, p. 39. 
                           
                         | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.23 | 
                        The IEA and ABARE estimate that the cost for electricity  produced by an IGCC plant with the full range of CCS  technology will range between A$ 51- 107 per MWh in 2010, with costs decreasing  over time.27 The Committee has not received an estimate for the total cost of CCS  at a pulverised coal power station in Australia.                            | 
                      
                      
                         | 
                          | 
                      
                      
                        Cost variables: capture, transport, storage and monitoring | 
                      
                      
                        Capture | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.24 | 
                        Capture is the most expensive component of CCS  accounting for between 70 and 80 per cent of the total costs.28                            | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.25 | 
                        The cost of capture will vary depending on:  
                       - technology choice and design;
 
                          - the integration and flexibility of new  technology;
 
                          - the type and quality of coal and its effect on  generating efficiency;
 
                          - the energy demands of the capture process;
 
                          - variant capital costs; and
 
                          - the overall performance of the plant with  capture deployment.
 
  | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.26 | 
                        As discussed in Chapter 3, there are three types  of capture technology: pre-combustion, post-combustion and oxyfuel combustion.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.27 | 
                        Pre-combustion technology can only be applied to  IGCC. Australia  has no IGCC plant (though an IGCC demonstration plant is planned for QLD). IGCC  is, however, the basis for many clean coal technology programmes worldwide,  many of which envision IGCC as the first step to a hydrogen economy.29 An MIT study notes that cost competitiveness has made IGCC plants the preferred  candidate for electricity generation with CCS.30                            | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.28 | 
                        The cost of generating electricity from an IGCC  plant compared to a conventional pulverised coal plant is, however,  considerably more expensive. The Cooperative Research Centre for Coal in  Sustainable Development (CCSD) commissioned a techno-economic assessment of  power generation options for Australia  and concluded that IGCC ‘is likely to remain significantly more expensive than  advanced pf [pulverised fuel], even with CO2 capture, for  electricity generation’.31 Yet the report also noted that ‘learning rates from increased implementation,  and the need for CO2 capture and other emissions controls, will give  the technology [IGCC] an overall cost advantage in the longer term’.32                            | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.29 | 
                        The costs of pre-combustion capture may also be  potentially offset by the considerable economic benefits of converting coal  into a liquid fuel. The House of Commons inquiry concluded that ‘for new a plant,  pre-combustion capture offers a significant advantage, in a carbon constrained  world, as a potential source of hydrogen’.33                            | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.30 | 
                        In the case of current post-combustion  technologies, the costs are substantial. Stanwell Corporation told the Committee  that, without significant technological improvements, the cost of  post-combustion capture would probably make it more attractive to build a new  generation plant from scratch.34 Terry Daly,  researcher at the University of NSW’s  Centre for Energy and Environmental Markets, told the Committee that the high  energy penalty of up to 30 per cent on a retrofitted power station makes the cost  of retrofitting unviable.35                            | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.31 | 
                        Whichever technology is chosen, the different  operating conditions and diversity of coal type mean significant variability in  cost.36 For example, the Centre for Energy and Environmental Markets noted that the  cost of CCS for Victorian brown coal based generators is likely to be higher  because of the need for offshore storage and the high moisture content of  Victoria’s brown coal, which would require an additional coal drying process  for IGCC and oxyfuel application.37                            | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.32 | 
                        According to the MIT study, the effect of coal  type on capture application means that ‘multiple technologies will likely be  deployed’.38 The study notes, for example, that, with further technological developments,  oxyfuel pulverised coal combustion could prove as attractive as IGCC, especially  with lower quality coals.39                            | 
                      
                      
                         | 
                          | 
                      
                      
                        Transport | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.33 | 
                        There are differences in views relating to the  expenses involved in transportation, and these are primarily in terms of  distance. The Centre for Energy and Environmental Markets at the University   of NSW states that transporting CO2  over distances greater than 500 km may not be economically viable.40 CSIRO suggest that transport of CO2 over distances of more than 100  kilometres can become expensive and uneconomical.41                            | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.34 | 
                        Transport costs will be dependent on factors  such as the method and pressure of the CO2 to be transported,  whether the pipeline has to pass through heavily populated areas, and the  nature of the terrain over which the pipeline is constructed.  | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.35 | 
                        The pipeline costs will also vary depending on  whether the pipeline is onshore or offshore. Onshore pipelines cost estimates  are lower than offshore pipelines. If storage is to take place offshore, then  shipping rather than pipeline becomes more economical for distances over 1 000 kilometres.42 However, for the foreseeable future, transport of CO2 by pipeline is  the most practical and economic option.43                            | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.36 | 
                        Another variable in the cost of transport is the  fluctuating price of steel, which accounts for a major part of the total  transport cost. Pipelines need to be constructed from special steel as any  water that infiltrates the pipeline will turn the CO2 into a  corrosive carbonic acid.44                            | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.37 | 
                        The other factor that will influence the final  transport cost is the CO2 mass flow rate.45 The greater the flow rate and quantity transported the lower the overall unit  cost.                            | 
                      
                      
                         | 
                          | 
                      
                      
                        Storage and monitoring | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.38 | 
                        Storage, monitoring and verification costs are  likely to be the least costly component in the CCS chain. Variation in storage  costs will arise depending on the geological features of the storage site and  whether there is a need to cap any potential leakage points.  | 
                      
                      
                         | 
                          | 
                      
                      
                        Future cost reductions | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.39 | 
                        While there is no real consensus about the costs  of the separate components of CCS, it is widely anticipated that costs will  decrease over time. Capture costs, currently by far the most expensive  component of CCS technology, will experience the greatest decrease as the  technology matures. The costs of transport and storage are less likely to  dramatically fall because of the maturity of these technologies.  | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.40 | 
                        The IEA states that the current costs of  capturing and storing CO2  are likely to be reduced by around 50 per cent by 2030.46 The IPCC states that over the next decade, ‘the cost of capture could be  reduced by 20-30 per cent and more should be achievable by new technologies  still in the research or demonstration phase’.47                            | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.41 | 
                        In addition to the development of new  technologies, cost reductions in CCS may  occur where it is possible to develop shared storage facilities. Australia  does have natural regions where it may be possible to create transport and  storage hubs. As the CO2CRC has stated, many  of Australia’s  emissions point sources are located within 200-500 kilometres from adequate  storage sites.48                            | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.42 | 
                        There is a consensus that such hubs would  substantially reduce costs by harnessing existing infrastructure, including  storage reservoirs, as well as utilising existing skills and technical  expertise.49 The Western Australian Government believes that, based on the current costs of  establishing CCS projects, CCS will only be economically viable when it is  applied to sources of emissions in existing heavy industrial areas, which would  allow it to utilise existing industrial infrastructure.50                            | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.43 | 
                        Such an assessment is endorsed by Anglo Coal,  which points out in its submission that one of Australia’s  biggest and most suitable storage resources is in the offshore Gippsland   Basin, which is in relatively close  proximity to the Latrobe Valley  brown coal deposits of the onshore Gippsland   Basin.51 The closely bunched nature of the onshore Gippsland Basin coal deposits could,  according to Anglo Coal, facilitate ‘the development of a joint-use pipeline  hub system to gather CO2 from the Latrobe Valley sources and  transport it to the storage sites for injection’.52                            | 
                      
                      
                         | 
                          | 
                      
                      
                        Economic viability and government incentives | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.44 | 
                        The difficulties in estimating realistic costs  of CCS deployment, given the wide range of variables and the still untested  nature of large-scale CCS application, are manifold. What is clear, however, is  that CCS deployment significantly increases the cost of electricity production  and that technological uncertainties and unknowns in cost estimation make  industry investment in CCS on a wide scale unlikely in the current environment.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.45 | 
                        In evidence to the Committee, the National  Generators Forum said that ‘at this early stage of development, the investment  risk of new coal based technology with carbon capture and storage is large’.53 Stanwell Corporation’s analysis indicated ‘that the capture and storage of CO2  produced in electricity generation is not economically viable in Australia  at this time’.54                            | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.46 | 
                        Industry submissions  overall signalled that economic incentives need to be in place for CCS  technology to be invested in by energy producers.55 The Energy Supply Association of Australia (ESAA) notes that:
                        
  … given CCS is at a clear cost disadvantage to existing  generation technologies, carbon emission constraints are the only reason CCS  technologies would be adopted by the energy supply industry.56                          | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.47 | 
                        Members of the AP6 and the Australian coal  industry are also ‘calling for a carbon price signal to support the technology  approach to abating and mitigating greenhouse gas emissions’.57                          | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.48 | 
                        According to the IPCC:
                          Most energy and economic modelling done to date suggests that  the deployment of CCS systems starts to be significant when carbon prices begin  to reach approximately 25-30 US$/t CO2 … [this modelling suggests  that] the large-scale deployment of CCS systems [will begin] within a few  decades from the start of any significant regime for mitigating global warming.58                          | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.49 | 
                        The CO2CRC  believes that a carbon price of A$20/tonne of CO2 avoided would make  CCS technology economically viable.59 This would depend on a range of conditions including the concentration of the  CO2 stream and proximity to the storage site.60 If such favourable conditions are not present, for example if the emissions  stream is low in CO2 and the storage site is hundreds of kilometres  away, CCS deployment could cost a power  station as much as A$100 or more a tonne per CO2 avoided. As such, CCS  deployment would become economically ‘non-viable’.61                          | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.50 | 
                        In terms of establishing the form a carbon price  should take, the introduction of an emissions trading scheme has received the  greatest support from industry. As Dr Peter   Cook points out, such a scheme ‘has the  benefit of being technology neutral and is likely to produce the least cost  outcome in the short term’.62                            | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.51 | 
                        On the other hand, Chevron and BP give only  qualified support to the introduction of an emissions trading scheme, arguing  that such a scheme is dependent on government support and regulation.63 Both suggest that the Australian Government’s LETDF be extended beyond the  demonstration phase either through the provision of direct grants, interest  free funding or tax reform (for example allowing immediate capital deduction or  accelerated depreciation).64                            | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.52 | 
                        Rio Tinto expressed the view that CCS should be  encouraged via a ‘push’ policy by which the government provides ongoing support  to help achieve the public goal of reducing greenhouse gas emissions.65
                          If the government would like these technologies to be deployed,  the government is going to have to support their deployment. It really is as  simple as that. The economics simply do not stack up without that support.66                            | 
                      
                      
                         | 
                          | 
                      
                      
                        Emissions trading in Australia | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.53 | 
                        On 10   December 2006, the Prime Minister announced the establishment of a  joint government-business Task Group on Emissions Trading. The terms of  reference were:
                          - To advise on the  nature and design of a workable global emissions trading scheme in which Australia would be able to participate; and
 
                        - To advise and  report on additional steps that might be taken, in Australia, consistent with the goal of establishing such a  system.
   | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.54 | 
                        The Task Group reported on 31 May 2007 and made a number of findings, Key  findings include:
                          - Australia  should not wait until a genuinely global agreement on emissions reduction has  been reached. Therefore, Australia  should adopt early emissions constraints;
 
                          - the most efficient way to manage risk is through  market mechanisms. Therefore, an Australian emissions trading scheme would  allow the nation to respond to future carbon constraints at least cost;
 
                          - the Australian Government should set a national  framework for reducing greenhouse gases and then let the market set the carbon  price;
 
                          - emissions trading enables the market—not the  government—to decide which new or existing technologies will reduce emissions  as least cost. Therefore, favouring particular technologies over others will  increase the costs we impose on ourselves;
 
                          - an Australian emissions trading scheme should be  as comprehensive as possible. However, it should not prejudice the  competitiveness of Australia’s  trade-exposed, emissions-intensive industries;
 
                          - a long-term aspirational goal should be set for  reducing Australia’s  production of greenhouse gases; and
 
                          - an emissions trading scheme should form the  principal mechanism to achieve emissions-reduction goals. However,  complementary measures will be required as part of a comprehensive mitigation  strategy.67
                             | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.55 | 
                        For the purpose of this report, it is important  to note the Task Group’s findings in relation to CCS. Specifically, it is the  Task Group’s conclusion that:
                          - the Government’s role in supporting research and  development (R&D) should be one of a technology ‘push’ through significant  funding for basic and applied R&D, followed by a clear long-term price  signal for carbon which will encourage market investment in the development of  low-emission technology; and
 
                          - resource related technologies should be Australia’s  R&D priority. Therefore, given the importance of coal to Australia’s  economy, CCS technologies should be a primary focus of R&D.68
                             | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.56 | 
                        On 4 June   2007, the Prime Minister outlined his response to the Task Group’s  report. This response included four key points:
                          - Australia  will move towards a domestic, cap and trade emissions trading system beginning  no later than 2012;
 
                          - Australia  will set a long-term aspirational goal for reducing carbon emissions, after  carefully accessing with detailed economic modelling the impact any target will  have on the Australian economy and Australian families. This target will be set  in 2008;
 
                          - the scheme will be national in scope and as  comprehensive as practicable, designed to take account of global developments  and to preserve the competitiveness of Australia’s trade exposed emissions  intensive industries; and
 
                          - governments need to let the market sort out the  most efficient means of lowering emission with all low emissions technologies  on the table, including nuclear power.69
                             | 
                      
                      
                         | 
                          | 
                      
                      
                        Conclusion | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.57 | 
                        Coal accounts for around 80 per cent of  electricity generation in Australia.  The comparatively inexpensive power derived from coal supports domestic and  commercial users, as well as many large, energy intensive industries in Australia.  The coal industry also provides employment. For example, in Queensland, 1 in 8  jobs depend on the resources industry; in Central Queensland the figure is 1 in  4.70                            | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.58 | 
                        Given the impact that the coal industry has on  the Australian economy and Australian families, any reduction in coal use would  be detrimental to Australia.  For example, modelling undertaken by MIT indicates that, without CCS and under  carbon constraint, coal use in 2050 would fall by 28 per cent. It is therefore  important that Australia  consider the employment of CCS technology.  | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.59 | 
                        There is also international consensus on the importance  of CCS technology, because fossil fuels will  remain a significant part of the world energy mix well into the future. As  noted in this Chapter’s introduction, the IPCC argues that including CCS  in the range of mitigation strategies adopted will reduce the cost of  stabilising global CO2  levels by at least a third.71 The British House of Commons report found the cost of electricity generation  using CCS to be comparable to, or less than,  other forms of low carbon electricity generation.                            | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.60 | 
                        In the Australian context, the ESAA, ABARE and  CO2CRC all found that the deployment of CCS  would reduce the cost of carbon abatement to the Australian economy.  | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.61 | 
                         However,  the Committee notes the very real difficulty of putting a dollar value on the  potential costs and ultimate economic benefits of CCS deployment.  | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.62 | 
                        Whatever the eventual costs of CCS,  everyone accepts that the price of electricity will rise as the world attempts  to combat global warming and reduce CO2 emissions. Clean energy  comes at a price, whether it will be from clean coal, renewables or nuclear,72 but in the case of CCS, the size of the  price increase is not clear. Available data suggests that CCS  might double the cost of electricity generation from coal, however, as CSIRO  notes, the cost of implementing capture technology is ‘only a proportion of the  costs consumers pay.’73 Robert Socolow  has predicted that as ‘the costs of distribution and transmission [of  electricity] are hardly affected [by CCS] … the  retail cost of electricity would increase by just 20%’.74                            | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.63 | 
                        Despite the potential for rising electricity  costs, CCS must be seriously considered. Given that Australia  is the world’s biggest coal exporter, a dramatic drop in coal consumption  occasioned by international carbon constraint without CCS deployment, would  have a significant detrimental impact on the Australian economy.  | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.64 | 
                        The future deployment of CCS  globally, and its ramifications for the coal industry, will depend on an  international research and demonstration effort now to which, as argued in Chapter  4, Australia has the ability to make a significant and leading contribution.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.65 | 
                        The Committee recognises that there is little  economic incentive at present for the power generating sector to embrace CCS  technology, as this technology which would add significantly to their operating  costs and impact on their profitability. If a carbon price is introduced, and  if the cost of CCS is at the lower end of the estimated range, then it is  likely that incorporating CCS technology into the next generation of coal-fired  power stations would be competitive with other forms of low emission power  generation.  | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.66 | 
                        Initially additional support will be needed to  facilitate the deployment of CCS at different sites and determine the total and  ongoing costs of clean coal. Until more research and demonstration has been  undertaken, there will continue to be speculation about the true costs of CCS  technology.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 6.67 | 
                        The Committee considers that CCS should be  viewed as a necessary component of a broader Australian Government response to  the challenge of climate change. Within that broader response, there is a role  for financial incentives, both direct and tax based, which the Government can  use to encourage a range of measures targeting global warming. Previous  recommendations in this report have stressed the need for further research and demonstration  in the field of CCS. Therefore, the Committee recommends that the Australian  Government, as part of its broader fiscal response to climate change, employ  financial incentives, both direct and tax based, in an effort to encourage  science and industry to continue developing and testing CCS technology.  | 
                      
                      
                        |   | 
                        Recommendation 4The Committee recommends that the Australian  Government, as part of its broader fiscal response to climate change, employ  financial incentives, both direct and tax based, in an effort to encourage  science and industry to continue developing and testing CCS technology.  | 
                      
	   
  
                       
                       
                           
						   
                             
                               | 1 | 
                               Discussions about  climate change tend to focus on the need to limit CO2-e levels to  550ppm or less (approximately double pre-industrial levels) if human societies  are to be safe-guarded from dangerous interference in the climate system that  is limiting global temperature rises to 2˚C from current levels. However, the  UN Framework Convention on Climate Change has avoided stating a desirable  stabilisation level. Today’s global CO2-e levels stand at 380ppm, an  increase of 100ppm since pre-industrial times. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 2 | 
                               IPCC Working Group III, Fourth Assessment  Report, Mitigation of Climate Change. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 3 | 
                               The Stern Review, The Economics of Climate Change, 30 October 2006, pp. vi & 211. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 4 | 
                               ESAA, Submission  No. 16, p. 2. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 5 | 
                               IPCC quoted in cLET, Submission No. 7, p. 4. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 6 | 
                               Australian Government, Submission No. 41, p. 16. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 7 | 
                               CO2CRC, Submission No. 36, p. 17. Back  | 
                             
                             
                               | 8 | 
                               Greenpeace Australia  Pacific, Submission No. 15, pp. 3-5. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 9 | 
                               Australian Government, Submission No. 41, p. 17. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 10 | 
                               IPCC, Special Report On Carbon dioxide Capture and Storage, Summary for Policy Makers  and Technical Summary, p. 38. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 11 | 
                               CO2CRC, Submission No. 36, p. 18. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 12 | 
                               The Stern Review, The Economics of Climate Change, 30 October 2006, p. vi. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 13 | 
                               Prime Ministerial Task Group on Emissions  Trading, Report of the Task Group on  Emissions Trading, May 2007, p. 5. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 14 | 
                               Australian Productivity Commission, Submission to the Prime Ministerial Task  Group on Emissions Trading, No. 28, p. 20. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 15 | 
                               Australian Productivity Commission, Submission to the Prime Ministerial Task  Group on Emissions Trading, No. 28, p. 20. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 16 | 
                               Australian Productivity Commission, Submission to the Prime Ministerial Task  Group on Emissions Trading, No. 28, p. 20. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 17 | 
                               Australian Business Roundtable on Climate  Change, <http://www.businessroundtable.com.au/html/jointceo.html>,  accessed 5 June 2007. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 18 | 
                               CSIRO research cited in, Australian  Business Roundtable on Climate Change, The  Business Case for Early Action, April 2006, p. 4. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 19 | 
                               IPCC, Special Report On Carbon dioxide Capture and Storage, Summary for Policy Makers  and Technical Summary, p. 9. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 20 | 
                               IPCC, Special Report On Carbon dioxide Capture and Storage, Summary for Policy Makers  and Technical Summary, p. 28. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 21 | 
                               House of Commons, Science and Technology  Committee, Meeting UK Energy and Climate Needs: The Role of  Carbon Capture and Storage, First Report of Session 2005-06, Volume 1, 1 February 2006, p. 51. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 22 | 
                               House of Commons, Science and Technology  Committee, Meeting UK Energy and Climate Needs: The Role of  Carbon Capture and Storage, First Report of Session 2005-06, Volume 1, 1 February 2006, p. 51. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 23 | 
                               Australian Government, Submission No. 41, p. 18. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 24 | 
                               Centre for Energy and Environmental  Markets, Submission No. 16, p. 15. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 25 | 
                               Centre for Energy and Environmental  Markets, Submission No. 16, p. 15.  The submission converts a US$  figure sourced from ABARE (Near Zero  Emission Technologies, p. 17) to Australian dollars using a conversion rate  of US$1 = 75 Australian cents. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 26 | 
                               Australian Government, Submission No. 41,  p. 18. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 27 | 
                                Australian Government, Submission No. 41,  p. 19. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 28 | 
                               Saddler et al, The Australia Institute, Geosequestration: What is it and how much  can it contribute to sustainable energy policy for Australia?, Discussion Paper No. 72, September  2004, p. 27; CO2CRC, Submission No. 36,  p. 14. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 29 | 
                               Cooperative Research Centre for Coal in  Sustainable Development, Techno-economic  assessment of power generation options in Australia,  Technology Assessment Report 52, April 2006 (parts updated August 2006), p. 26. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 30 | 
                               MIT, The Future of Coal, March 2007, p.  xiii. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 31 | 
                               Cooperative Research Centre for Coal in  Sustainable Development, Techno-economic  assessment of power generation options in Australia,  Technology Assessment Report 52, April 2006 (parts updated August 2006), p. ii. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 32 | 
                               Cooperative Research Centre for Coal in  Sustainable Development, Techno-economic  assessment of power generation options in Australia,  Technology Assessment Report 52, April 2006 (parts updated August 2006), p. 26. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 33 | 
                               House of Commons, Science and Technology  Committee, Meeting UK Energy and Climate Needs: The Role of  Carbon Capture and Storage, First Report of Session 2005-06, Volume 1, 1 February 2006, p. 17. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 34 | 
                               Stanwell Corporation, Transcript, 11 September 2006, p. 17. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 35 | 
                               Centre for Energy and Environmental  Markets, Transcript, 30   October 2006, p. 6. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 36 | 
                               MIT, The Future of Coal, March 2007, p.  22. Back  | 
                             
                             
                               | 37 | 
                               Centre for Energy and Environmental  Markets, Submission No. 33, p. 15. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 38 | 
                               MIT, The Future of Coal, March 2007, p.  xiii. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 39 | 
                               MIT, The Future of Coal, March 2007, p.  xiii. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 40 | 
                               Centre for Energy and Environmental  Markets, Submission No. 33, p. 12. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 41 | 
                               CSIRO, Submission  No. 10, p. 4. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 42 | 
                               IPCC, Special Report On Carbon dioxide Capture and Storage, Summary for Policy Makers  and Technical Summary, p. 28 Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 43 | 
                               CO2CRC, Submission No. 36, p. 9. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 44 | 
                               CSIRO, Submission  No. 10, p. 4. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 45 | 
                               Mass flow rate, in this instance, refers  to the movement of CO2 through a pipeline per unit of time. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 46 | 
                               OECD/IEA, Energy Technology Analysis: Prospects for CO2 Capture and Storage, Paris:  2004, p. 17. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 47 | 
                               IPCC quoted in, CO2CRC, Submission No. 36, p. 16. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 48 | 
                               CO2CRC, Submission No. 36, p. 19. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 49 | 
                               Santos, Submission No. 25, p. 3. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 50 | 
                               Department of Industry and Resources,  Government of Western Australia, Submission No. 26, p. 5. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 51 | 
                               Anglo Coal, Submission No. 24, p. 8. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 52 | 
                               Anglo Coal, Submission No. 24, p. 8. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 53 | 
                               National Generators Forum, Transcript, 4 December 2006,  p. 2. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 54 | 
                               Stanwell Corporation, Submission No. 32, p. 4. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 55 | 
                               AGL, Submission  No. 39, p. 3; BP Australia, Submission  No. 43, pp. 14-15; CRC for Greenhouse Accounting, Submission No. 14, p. 1. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 56 | 
                               ESAA, Submission  No. 16, p. 2. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 57 | 
                               Environment Business Australia, Submission No. 37, p. 2. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 58 | 
                               IPCC, Special Report On Carbon dioxide Capture and Storage, p. 341. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 59 | 
                               CO2CRC, Submission No. 36, p. 14. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 60 | 
                               CO2CRC, Submission No. 36, p. 14. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 61 | 
                               CO2CRC, Submission No. 36, p. 14. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 62 | 
                               CO2CRC, Supplementary Submission No. 36.1, p. 9. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 63 | 
                               Chevron Australia, Submission No. 12, p. 14; BP  Australia, Submission No. 43, p. 15. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 64 | 
                               Chevron Australia, Submission No. 12, p. 14; BP  Australia, Submission No. 43, p. 15. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 65 | 
                               Rio Tinto, Transcript, 26 February 2007,  pp. 4, 5 & 7. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 66 | 
                               Rio Tinto, Transcript, 26 February 2007,  p. 8. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 67 | 
                               Prime Ministerial Task Group on Emissions  Trading, Report of the Task Group on  Emissions Trading, May 2007, pp. 6-7. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 68 | 
                               Prime Ministerial Task Group on Emissions  Trading, Report of the Task Group on  Emissions Trading, May 2007, pp. 127-29. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 69 | 
                               Prime Minister Howard,  Address to the Liberal Party Federal Council, 4 June 2007, <http://www.pm.gov.au/media/Speech/2007/Speech24350.cfm>,  accessed 6 June 2007. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 70 | 
                               Queensland  Resources Council, Submission No. 20,  p. 3. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 71 | 
                               IPCC quoted in cLET, Submission No. 7, p. 4. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 72 | 
                               Friends of the Earth, Submission No. 13, p. 8; National Generators Forum, Transcript, 4 December 2006, p. 7;  Australian Coal Association, Transcript,  27 November 2006, p. 17. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 73 | 
                               CSIRO, Supplementary Submission No. 10.1, p. 2. Back | 
                             
                             
                               | 74 | 
                               Robert  Socolow quoted in, Quirin Schiermeier, Putting the carbon back: the hundred  billion tonne challenge, Nature Vol. 442, Iss. 7103 (10 August 2006), p. 623. Back |