2. …and Senate ENR covers CCUS/DAC
Meanwhile, the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee held a hearing to examine opportunities and challenges in deploying carbon capture, utilization, and sequestration (CCUS) and direct air capture (DAC) technologies.
The hearing featured:
- The need for the EPA to swiftly grant permits for Class VI wells to store captured CO2 in underground geologic sites, or
- Grant primacy to states to issue their own permits for these wells.
- To date, the EPA has a backlog of 169 Class VI well permit applications, and multiple states are in the process of applying for primacy.
Ranking Member Barrasso (R-WY) said, “If we intend to maintain electric reliability in this country and reduce emissions at the same time, it is critical that we get this right. That means advancing policies that give carbon capture technologies a chance to reach its full potential.”
The EPA has announced $50 million in funding from the IIJA will be for states to apply for Class VI primacy. The funds will be allocated evenly among the 25 states and Tribes interested in obtaining Class VI primacy for permanent sequestration of carbon dioxide underground.
What’s clear: CCUS and DAC technologies are critical to reduce and remove CO2 emissions. Despite momentum in developing projects, challenges remain in the transport and storage of captured CO2.
Plug in: ClearPath’s CEO Rich Powell was quoted in a feature story from Gas Pathways on the issue, stating, “The development and deployment of more CCUS projects and related infrastructure are essential to reducing CO2 emissions from the electricity and industrial sectors, domestically and globally.”
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