By David Blackmon
Forbes, Apr. 24, 2023
For the oil and gas industry, the success or failure of a rapidly growing carbon capture, use and storage (CCUS) sector in the U.S. and globally is shaping up to be almost a matter of survival as the world community treads down the path of the ‘energy transition.’ With so much riding on a company’s emissions profile and ESG score, CCUS has become one of the most fit for purpose means of improving those metrics.
Five Factors Hold The Key
The same holds true for companies that operate heavy-emitting manufacturing facilities whose tailgate emissions are slated to become contributors to multi-party CCUS projects at major hubs in specific geographic areas. In a recent report titled CCUS Play Fundamentals, analysts at big energy information and analytics firm Enverus point out that the most successful locations for major projects will be those that can bring a specific set of factors to the table:
- A large number of emitters concentrated in a compact area;
- Close proximity to high-capacity underground pore space;
- Necessary pipeline and other key infrastructure;
- A project lead company with the internal expertise required to manage the project; and
- Supportive regulatory and policy frameworks that incentivize capital to flow to CCUS.
In a recent interview, Graham Bain, vice president at EIR, a business unit at Enverus, pointed to various locations along the Texas and Lousiana Gulf Coast as potential hubs that possess the needed set of factors. “You’ve got, first of all, high volume clusters of emissions,” Bain says, “So if we’re talking about hub, they make a lot of sense. It becomes more economically viable in terms of the infrastructure build out, pipeline connections with these hubs.”
Read the full article on Forbes.