Technology readiness: Implementation of CO2 capture, utilisation and removal measures

Iron and steel

Current status of implementation and existing gaps

CO2 capture, utilisation and storage measures can be retrofitted to existing traditional fossil fuel-based steel production. However, progress has been limited for decades. As of 2024, six commercial-scale CO2 capture, utilisation, and storage projects for iron and steelmaking are under development (Global CCS Institute, 2024a).

Examples and initiatives

The only operational plant where CO2 capture and storage is used solely with the DRI process for enhanced oil recovery is the Al Reyadah project by Emirates Steel in the United Arab Emirates. In 2023, around 26.6% of the gas-based steel plant’s emissions were captured (IEEFA, 2024).

Chemical and petrochemical

Current status of implementation and existing gaps

There has been progress in deploying CO2 capture plants in the chemical industry; a few are operational, and several are in the pipeline. CO2 capture can be economically competitive for cases with chemical processes that have a relatively large CO2 capture stream. However, large-scale deployment is hampered by high costs and nascent transport and storage chains.

Most of the CO2 captured today is used for oil recovery. As the energy sector moves away from fossil fuels, the CO2 captured will likely play a large role in the development of e-fuel production facilities for the shipping and aviation sectors.

Examples and initiatives

The Guanghui Energy plant in China commenced operations in 2023, capturing 100 000 tonnes of CO2 annually from methanol production Global CCS Institute, 2024a).

Cement

Current status of implementation and existing gaps

CO2 capture, utilisation and storage (CCUS) for high capture rate technologies with pre-commercial demonstrations are at various development stages. The cement industry is increasing investments in CCUS with a goal of capturing up to 14 MtCO2 by 2030 (Cembureau, 2024)

Over 30 commercial-scale projects are in development, in China, Europe and North America. The GCCA roadmap set a milestone of 10 industrial-scale plants with CCUS by 2030; however, large-scale financing with initial capital investments including very high operational costs remains a barrier (GCCA, 2024).

Examples and initiatives

The Brevik CCS Project in Norway, the first full-scale cement CCUS plant, is expected to capture 400 000 tonnes of CO2 per year (Global CCS Institute, 2022).

Heidelberg Materials is developing North America’s first large-scale CCUS facility in Edmonton, Alberta, in Canada. It is expected to capture 1 MtCO2 per year (GCCA, 2024)

CNBM Qingzhou in China is the world’s largest cement CCUS project, expected to capture about 200 000 tonnes of CO2 per year (GCCA, 2024).

Enablers

Enablers (39)