Current:Home > ContactCarbon capture technology: The future of clean energy or a costly and misguided distraction? -TradeWisdom
Carbon capture technology: The future of clean energy or a costly and misguided distraction?
View
Date:2025-04-16 00:53:34
Congress recently allocated billions of dollars in subsidies to promote the expansion of carbon capture technology. If new Environmental Protection Agency rules take effect, most fossil fuel-burning plants may be compelled to implement carbon capture technology.
However, carbon capture has faced significant criticism as a pricey and misguided distraction in the battle against climate change.
The National Carbon Capture Center, located along the banks of the Coosa River in Alabama, is a research facility affiliated with a coal and natural gas-fired power plant operated by Southern Company. It resembles a large laboratory where carbon capture has been tested for over a decade. John Northington, the facility's director, said that it represents a culmination of 135,000 hours of testing and over 70 different technologies.
"Our main mission here is to test carbon capture," Northington said.
Coal and gas-fired power plants are responsible for approximately 60% of electricity generation in the United States, and are the country's second-largest source of greenhouse gas emissions. Carbon capture technology aims to prevent CO2 emissions from being released into the atmosphere by capturing them with chemicals and storing them underground.
Northington said that the technology does work, with an average capture rate of around 95%.
But the real-world implementation of carbon capture has faced challenges.
The Petra Nova coal-fired power plant near Houston was the first and only commercial plant in the U.S. to use carbon capture. It encountered technical issues and high costs, and was ultimately mothballed in 2020. Its current owner is attempting to revive the plant.
Critics that include MIT Professor Charles Harvey argue that carbon capture and storage, also known as CCS, is not economically viable because it costs less to build new renewable energy projects such as wind and solar than to operate an existing coal plant.
"A dollar spent in renewable technologies will avert a lot more emissions than CCS will," said Harvey.
He argues that carbon capture allows the industry to continue relying on fossil fuels, and even the captured carbon from the Petra Nova plant was used to extract more oil from the ground in a process called enhanced oil recovery.
"The frustrating thing is that there is an easy solution and that is to stop using fossil fuels," Harvey said. "We have the technology to do that right now and I don't think we should be distracted from that."
While skeptical of CCS, Harvey believes that direct air capture, also known as DAC, which extracts CO2 from the atmosphere, could play a role in combating climate change.
The ClimeWorks plant in Iceland, operated by Swiss company ClimeWorks, is the world's largest DAC facility. It captures CO2 from the air, separates it and injects it into rock formations for permanent storage. However, these DAC facilities can only remove a fraction of the CO2 emissions released annually.
"Every ton of CO2 that's removed is a ton that's actually helping fight climate change and not contributing to global warming," said Climeworks' Chief Marketing Officer Julie Gosalvez.
But it can only remove about 4,000 of the nearly 40 billion tons of CO2 humans are pumping into the atmosphere every year. Its working to increase that amount and, meanwhile, larger facilities, including the one in Texas, are now being built as well.
"I'm excited," Northington said. "I think there's a tremendous amount of potential."
- In:
- Houston
- Climate Change
- Carbon Capture
- Environment
Ben Tracy is a CBS News senior national and environmental correspondent based in Los Angeles.
TwitterveryGood! (24)
Related
- How to watch the 'Blue Bloods' Season 14 finale: Final episode premiere date, cast
- Why 19 Kids and Counting's Jana Duggar Is Sparking Engagement Rumors
- Messi enjoying 'last battles' to fullest as Argentina reaches Copa America final
- Paul George: 'I never wanted to leave' Clippers, but first offer 'kind of disrespectful'
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- VP visits U.S. men's basketball team in Vegas before Paris Olympics
- Microsoft quits OpenAI board seat as antitrust scrutiny of artificial intelligence pacts intensifies
- Mummified body of missing American climber found 22 years after he vanished in Peru
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Beryl live updates: Heat drives Texans to sleep in cars amid outages while the North floods
Ranking
- 'Malcolm in the Middle’ to return with new episodes featuring Frankie Muniz
- Samsung brings tech’s latest fashion to wearable technology with AI twists in new watch and ring
- The retirement savings crisis: Why more Americans can’t afford to stop working
- Philadelphia won’t seek death penalty in Temple U. officer’s death. Colleagues and family are upset
- Intellectuals vs. The Internet
- Kevin, Frankie Jonas on their childhood, 'Claim to Fame' Season 3
- Spain's Álvaro Morata faces Euro 2024 fitness worry after postgame incident
- Another political party in North Carolina OK’d for fall; 2 others remain in limbo
Recommendation
At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
A troubling first: Rising seas blamed for disappearance of rare cactus in Florida
The retirement savings crisis: Why more Americans can’t afford to stop working
It is way too hot. 160 million under alert as heat breaks records and a bridge
Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
The Best Deals From Target's Circle Week Sale -- Save Big on Dyson, Apple, Ninja & More
Lindsay Hubbard Defends Boyfriend's Privacy Amid Rumors About His Identity
Armed man fatally shot in gunfire exchange at Yellowstone National Park identified