Contents
                    Foreword
                        Membership of the Committee
                        Terms of reference
                        List of abbreviations
                        List of recommendations
                        Chapter 1 Introduction
                        Chapter 2 Climate change, coal and CCS
                        Chapter 3 Carbon capture and storage
                        Chapter 4 Australian CCS demonstration projects
                        Chapter 5 The environmental benefits and risks of CCS and public perception
                        Chapter 6 The economic benefits and costs of CCS
                        Chapter 7 Legislative and regulatory framework
                        Chapter 8 Positioning Australian industry to capture possible market applications
                        Dissenting report
                        Appendix A – List of submissions
                        Appendix B – List of exhibits
                        Appendix C – List of hearings, witnesses and inspections
                      Appendix D – Principal power stations in Australia
                    
       
                    Foreword
                    There is now compelling evidence that human activity is  changing the global climate. While Australia remains a relatively  minor emitter of greenhouse gases, our emissions, particularly in the  stationary energy and transport sector, have been rising since 1990.  Geosequestration or carbon capture and storage (CCS)  technology has the potential to play an important role in the global effort to  reduce CO2 emissions. It may also prove to be of particular importance  to Australia.
                      
Australia  is between a rock and a hard place. For many years, Australia has benefited from being  able to produce very cheap electricity from our vast reserves of both black and  brown coal. Australia  has approximately 8.6 per cent of world black coal reserves, which, at current  production levels, would last 215 years. Australia also has enough brown  coal to last for another 800 years at current production levels.
Australia’s  energy sector is heavily reliant on black and brown coal with over 83 per cent  of total electricity generated from this source. Australia is also the largest  exporter of coal in the world—in 2005, Australian coal exports were worth $24  billion, representing Australia’s  largest commodity export.
 
It is expected that Australia, and the world, will  continue to rely on coal well into the future. This presents us with the  challenge of reducing greenhouse gas emissions whilst remaining dependent on  coal. CCS provides a possible  solution to these competing demands. In a carbon-constrained world, if Australia is  able to demonstrate and commercialise CCS  technology it will protect both the environment and the coal industry.
Carbon capture and storage comprises three broadly defined  stages: (i) CO2 separation and capture at the source; (ii)  transportation of CO2 to the storage site; (iii) long-term storage  of the CO2, largely in an underground geological facility or a  depleted oil or gas field, for thousands of years.
There are three possible ways to approach the first stage of  the process, that of the separation and capture of CO2:  post-combustion, oxyfuel combustion and pre-combustion. Each process differs in  either the way in which the CO2 is separated from other gases or at  which point in the process the CO2 is captured. Whilst oxyfuel and  pre-combustion technologies are viewed more favourably as their processes are  more efficient, the current stock of Australia’s power plants are most suited  to be adapted to post-combustion technology.
 
In Australia  and internationally there is currently a large stock of pulverised coal-fired  power stations. Many of these plants are expected to operate for up to 40 more years.  If serious cuts in emission are to be achieved by 2050, some form of  post-combustion capture technology will need to be part of the CCS strategy.
Once the CO2 has been separated and captured, it  must be transported to a storage site. This is a relatively simple process and  could occur via pipeline, road, ship or rail. Further research will be  required, particularly to ascertain which distances make transport options  economical. Storage options include: saline aquifers; depleted gas and oil  fields; unmineable coal seams; or the injection of CO2 into existing  oil and gas reservoirs for enhanced recovery purposes.
 
In Australia,  deep saline aquifers represent 94 per cent of our feasible geological storage  capacity and have therefore become a key focus of storage research. However,  all storage options need to be considered. In particular, the storage potential  in the Wollongong-Sydney-Newcastle region needs to be further explored. The  Committee recommends that the Australian Government provide funding to CSIRO to  progress research into the storage potential for permanent CO2  sequestration in sedimentary basins in New    South Wales.
Once CO2 has been stored underground, effective  and accurate technologies to measure and monitor the CO2 are  essential for the purposes of regulation, carbon accounting and public safety.  The greatest environmental risk associated with CCS  concerns the potential for CO2 leakage, which could have serious  consequences for the environment and people’s health. These risks can be  mitigated through further research, rigorous site selection and post-injection  management.
The extent of the environmental benefits of CCS continues to be debated. Some argue that CCS has the potential to reduce global CO2  emissions by 7.8 per cent with potentially greater benefits to be seen in the  later half of the 21st century. Others contend that, given the environmental  risks, there are more viable options. The Committee concludes that there are  substantial positive environmental benefits to be gained from the deployment of  CCS, providing there is also  appropriate regulation and scrutiny of environmental risks. The Committee  recommends the implementation of a rigorous regulatory environmental risk  mitigation framework for CCS.
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. In Australia,  a number of smaller CCS  demonstration projects are underway such as the Gorgon project, Hazelwood 2030  and ZeroGen. These and other projects will enhance our knowledge base.
 
However, the major challenge is to mount a project at the  500MW scale which demonstrates all stages in the process—from coal conversion,  carbon capture, and transport, through to sequestration and long-term  monitoring. This raises logistic coordination and environmental and technical  challenges that are not tested or resolved by small-scale demonstrations. The  Committee recommends that the Australian Government fund one or more  large-scale CCS projects utilising  a competitive tender process to ascertain which project will receive the funding.  It is also expected that these demonstration projects will provide an ideal  opportunity to subject CCS to  rigorous environmental, health and safety regulations before any future  long-term commercial operations are in place.
Alongside its investigation of the potential environmental  benefits and risks associated with CCS,  the Committee also examined the economic benefits and costs. It is difficult to  accurately estimate the economic impact of CCS.  The IPCC estimates that, in the long-term, including CCS  in a range of mitigation strategies will reduce the cost of stabilising global  CO2 emissions by 30 per cent.
 
Equally as challenging is accurately measuring the economic  cost of inaction. Available research indicates that the Australian economy may  be more adversely affected by climate change than other developed countries.
 
The predicted actual costs of implementing CCS technology also vary. Capturing CO2  is the most expensive aspect of the process, accounting for between 70 and 80  per cent of the total costs. The cost of capture will vary depending on a range  of factors which are outlined in the report. Costs associated with the  transport of CO2 will also vary depending on the distance  transported, the pressure used to transport the CO2 through a  pipeline and the terrain through which the pipeline passes. Storage and  monitoring is expected to be the least costly component of the process and the  total cost is expected to reduce over time.
There is also the question of what impact CCS deployment will have on electricity costs.  Clean energy comes at a price but in the case of CCS,  the size of a 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’.1 Conversely, 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 [per cent]’.2
It has been advised that the technological unknowns in cost  estimates make industry investment in CCS  on a wide-scale unlikely in the current environment. Industry has called for  economic incentives, including a carbon price signal, to foster the development  of CCS technology. The Committee  recommends that the Australian Government employ financial incentives, both  direct and tax based, in an effort to encourage science and industry to  continue developing and testing CCS  technology.
The Committee also maintains that the Australian and state  governments must develop appropriate legal and regulatory frameworks covering  the injection of CO2 and subsequent operational monitoring, site  closure and post-abandonment monitoring. This will provide confidence for  investors to undertake large-scale CCS  development. The issue of long-term liability is of particular concern.  Regulations need to be flexible and robust enough to apply to the sequestration  and storage of CO2 which is intended to be in place for hundreds, if  not thousands, of years. Regulations for financial liability need to be  designed to cover both the period during which the CO2 is being  sequestered and the period after the injection process has ceased. Therefore,  the Committee recommends that the Australian Government, following industry  consultation, develop legislation to define the financial liability and ongoing  monitoring responsibilities at geosequestration sites.
The Committee concludes its report with a discussion on how  best to position Australian industry to capture possible market applications of  CCS. Australia has a solid skills base  in this area and a reputation as a world leader in the development of CCS science and technology. A number of programs  administered by various universities and research centres are in place to  ensure that our skill base keeps developing and expanding. Greater funding in  this area will assist in retaining skilled people who may be attracted to more  lucrative jobs. Nurturing and further developing a skills base will be key in  further developing CCS technology  and demonstrating it on a large scale. If Australia is successful in this  regard, then it is expected that global marketing and export opportunities will  arise.
Confidence in the potential environmental benefits of CCS technology is growing. Nevertheless, the  technology underpinning this climate change strategy is yet to be fully proven.  Modelling and general scientific optimism is not enough to guarantee the  success of CCS. A great deal more  demonstration work is needed for this technology to be part of the suite of  options that will need to be rolled out if Australia, and the world, are to  make serious inroads into significantly reducing the current levels of  anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions. Australia has the opportunity to  play a key role in the development of this technology which could provide  enormous environmental and economic benefits both domestically and  internationally.
I would like to thank all those who contributed to this  inquiry through submissions and discussion with the Committee. I would also  like to thank Committee members and the Secretariat staff for their efforts  throughout the inquiry process.
                    
                    
                    Petro Georgiou MP
                        Chair
                    
Membership of the Committee
  
     Chair  | 
    Mr Petro Georgiou MP  | 
      | 
  
  
     Deputy Chairman   | 
    Mr Harry Quick MP | 
      | 
  
  
     Members   | 
    Mr Harry Jenkins MP | 
    Mr David Tollner MP | 
  
  
        | 
    Mr Chris Hayes MP | 
    Hon Danna Vale MP | 
  
  
        | 
    Dr Dennis Jensen MP | 
    Mr Roger Price MP (until 08/05/07) | 
  
  
        | 
    Hon Jackie Kelly MP | 
    Mr Kelvin Thomson MP  (from  08/05/07) | 
  
  
        | 
    Dr Mal Washer MP | 
      | 
  
Terms of Reference
The House of Representatives Standing Committee on Science  and Innovation is to inquire into and report on the science and application of  geosequestration technology in Australia,  with particular reference to:
- The science underpinning geosequestration  technology;
 
- The potential environment and economic benefits  and risks of such technology; 
 
- The skill base in Australia to advance the science of  geosequestration technology;
 
- Regulatory  and approval issues governing geosequestration technology and trials;  and
 
- How to best position Australian industry to  capture possible market applications.
 
      List of abbreviations 
  
    ABARE  | 
    Australian Bureau of Agriculture and Resource Economics  | 
  
  
    ACA  | 
    Australian Coal Association  | 
  
  
    AGO  | 
    Australian Greenhouse Office  | 
  
  
    AP6  | 
    Asia Pacific Partnership    on Clean Development and Climate  | 
  
  
    APCRC  | 
    Australian Petroleum Cooperative Research Centre  | 
  
  
    BIA  | 
    Barrow     Island Act  | 
  
  
    CCS  | 
    Carbon Capture and Storage  | 
  
  
    CCSD  | 
    Cooperative Research Centre for Coal in Sustainable    Development  | 
  
  
    cLET  | 
    Centre for Low Emission Technology  | 
  
  
    CO2  | 
    Carbon Dioxide  | 
  
  
    CO2CRC  | 
    Cooperative Research Centre for Greenhouse Gas    Technologies  | 
  
  
    CO2-e  | 
    Carbon Dioxide Equivalent  | 
  
  
    COAG  | 
    Council of Australian Governments  | 
  
  
    CSIRO  | 
    Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research    Organisation  | 
  
  
    CSLF  | 
    Carbon Sequestration Leadership Forum  | 
  
  
    EOR  | 
    Enhanced Oil Recovery  | 
  
  
    EPA  | 
    Environmental Protection Agency  | 
  
  
    GCEP  | 
    Global Climate and Energy Project  | 
  
  
    GDP  | 
    Gross Domestic Product  | 
  
  
    GEODISC  | 
    Geological Disposal of Carbon  | 
  
  
    GHG  | 
    Greenhouse Gas  | 
  
  
    GSL  | 
    Gas Storage Licenses  | 
  
  
    IDGCC  | 
    Integrated Drying and Gasification Combined Cycle  | 
  
  
    IEA  | 
    International Energy Agency  | 
  
  
    IGCC  | 
    Integrated Gasification Combined Cycle  | 
  
  
    IPCC  | 
    Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change  | 
  
  
    ISC  | 
    Industry Skills Council  | 
  
  
    LETDF  | 
    Low Emissions Technology Demonstration Fund  | 
  
  
    LVCSA  | 
    Latrobe     Valley CO2    Storage Assessment Project  | 
  
  
    MCMPR  | 
    Ministerial Council on Mineral and Petroleum Resources  | 
  
  
    MIT  | 
    Massachusetts Institute of Technology  | 
  
  
    MRET  | 
    Mandatory Renewal Energy Target  | 
  
  
    MW  | 
    Megawatts  | 
  
  
    PEL  | 
    Petroleum Exploration Licenses  | 
  
  
    PMSEIC  | 
    Prime Minister’s Science, Engineering and Innovation    Council  | 
  
  
    PPL  | 
    Petroleum Production Licenses  | 
  
  
    PPM  | 
    Parts Per Million  | 
  
  
    R&D  | 
    Research and Development  | 
  
  
    RIISC  | 
    Resources and Infrastructure Industry Skills Council  | 
  
  
    TAR  | 
    Third Assessment Report  | 
  
  
    ZCP  | 
    Zero Carbon Project  | 
  
 
List of recommendations 
3 Carbon capture and storage
Recommendation 1
The 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.
4 Australian CCS demonstration projects
  Recommendation 2
  The Committee recommends that the Australian  Government fund one or more large-scale projects which will demonstrate the  operation and integration of the CCS—capture, transportation and sequestration  and monitoring. The Government’s assessment of which project(s) will receive  funding will be based on a competitive tender process.
  
 5 The environmental benefits and risks of CCS and public  perception
  Recommendation 3
  The Committee recommends that the Australian  Government implement a rigorous regulatory environmental risk mitigation  framework for CCS which covers:
- Criteria for CCS site selection and an assessment of  the environmental impact at selected sites;
 
- Assessment of the risk of abrupt or gradual leakage,  and appropriate response strategies; and
 
- Requirements for long-term site monitoring and  reporting.
 
 6 The economic benefits and costs of CCS
  Recommendation 4
  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.
7 Legislative and regulatory framework
  Recommendation 5
  The Committee recommends that the Australian  Government, following industry consultation, develop legislation to define the  financial liability and ongoing monitoring responsibilities at a  geosequestration site. 
  
  The Committee recommends that financial liability and  site responsibility should consist of three phases:
 - Full financial liability and responsibility for site  safety and monitoring should rest with industry operators for the injection  phase and a subsequent length of time (this time to be determined by the  Australian Government subject to specific site risk analysis);
 
- Following the above specified time, shared financial  liability and responsibility for site safety and monitoring should rest equally  with industry operators and state, territory and Australian governments in the  longer term. The exact length of this shared responsibility and liability phase  should be determined by the governments subject to specific site risk analysis;  and 
 
- Following the determined phase of shared liability and  responsibility, full financial liability and responsibility for site safety and  monitoring should be transferred to the two spheres of government in  perpetuity.
    
    
        
 
  
 
  Footnotes
                             
                               | 1 | 
                               CSIRO, Supplementary  Submission No. 10.1, p. 2. Back | 
        
                             
                               | 2 | 
                               Robert  Socolow quoted in, Quirin   Schiermeier, Putting the carbon back: the hundred billion tonne challenge,  Nature Vol. 442, Issue. 7103, (10   August 2006), p. 623. Back | 
        
       
       
       
                         
    
	
	    
             
       
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