MORE THAN 700 EXPERTS GATHER TO EXPLORE WAYS TO EXPEDITE
DEPLOYMENT OF
CARBON CAPTURE & SEQUESTRATION

DOE
Assistant Secretary Shope, Pittsburgh Mayor, & County
Executive Address Experts
from
23 Countries
As more than
725 key decisionmakers from the business, government and
academic communities gathered here for the Sixth Annual
Conference on Carbon Capture and Sequestration from May 7-10,
the overwhelming message was clear: industrial-scale storage
can begin immediately with existing technology despite some of
the regulatory and liability uncertainties associated with the
technology. “Carbon capture and storage seems to be close to
the takeoff stage and make no mistake now is the time to
act—the time to act carefully and methodically to avoid
unintended consequences,” acting Assistant Secretary of Energy
for Fossil Energy Thomas Shope said in remarks May 8. “We
need to begin creating a statutory and regulatory system that
is capable of dealing with the big financial, social, and
legal questions such as licensing and permitting, recognize
the accepted best practices, land owner royalties, citizens
rights, long term liability and of course the possibility of
leakage no matter how remote it is,” he said, adding that
“without the facts and the evidence it is difficult to advance
or oppose a rule on capture and storage itself.”
Pittsburgh Mayor & County Executive Open Conference
Allegheny County
Executive Dan Onorato (D) and Pittsburgh Mayor Luke Ravenstahl
(D) opened the conference May 8. “Welcome to coal country,”
Onorato said, going on to highlight the work of the National
Energy Technology Laboratory, which is in Allegheny County. “I
took a tour of [the lab] a few months ago,” he said. “It’s right
there with the technology that’s being tested. It’s carbon
capture. If we could ever perfect that, we’d take away the
biggest problem of burning coal and it will be the most reliable
source of energy we would have here.” Ravenstahl pointed out
that the tremendous gains in air and water quality in the city
over the last several decades gives a precedent for
environmental health alongside growth, a key concern when
implementing carbon capture and sequestration. “We are
transforming … from a smoky city, from an old city, to a new hip
and energetic city,” Ravenstahl said. “There’s no reason
certainly that we can’t be the leader when we talk about coal
and energy as well. I want to thank you all for the work that
you do. I want you to know we are as committed as you are in the
city of Pittsburgh to making this conference a success.”
For
additional stories and highlights from the conference
in
GHG Transactions & Technologies,
CLICK HERE

Didn’t
Attend the 6th Annual CCS Conference? You
can still gain the benefit from the presentations made by key
decisionmakers and the over 200 technical papers by purchasing
the CD of the proceedings for only $395. A user-friendly,
searchable compilation that provides the latest updates on
actions being taken and the status of RD&D from the leading
organizations and experts on carbon capture, storage and
sequestration. Order by emailing your request to carbonsq@exchangemonitor
or calling 1-877-303-7367 ext. 109. |