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Climate Now Episode 109

August 14, 2023

Climate Now Debates: Carbon Capture and Storage

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Featured Experts

Susan D. Hovorka
Senior Research Scientist, UT Austin

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Susan D. Hovorka

Senior Research Scientist, UT Austin

Susan D. Hovorka is a Senior Research Scientist at the Bureau of Economic Geology, Jackson School of Geosciences, at The University of Texas at Austin. She has a BA in geology from Earlham College and an MA and PhD from the University of Texas. She has worked on diverse topics related to water quality protection, waste storage in bedded salt, and reservoir characterization. Her current research focuses on assessment of effectiveness of subsurface geologic sequestration of CO2 as a mechanism for reducing atmospheric greenhouse gas emissions. Hovorka is the principle investigator of the Gulf Coast Carbon Center, an industry/academic partnership working on economically viable approaches to geologic sequestration of CO2. She has recently completed leading a research team in completion of the two-phase Frio Pilot, a first US field test of storage of CO2 in brine-filled sandstones also funded by DOE-NETL.

Charles Harvey
Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering, MIT

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Charles Harvey

Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering, MIT

Charles Harvey is a hydrologist and biogeochemist. His theoretical work has lead to fundamental advances in understanding chemical transport and reaction in flowing groundwater. He has also built large-scale field programs to investigate the interaction of groundwater and seawater in the US, arsenic contamination of groundwater in Bangladesh and Vietnam, and the coupled hydrology and ecology of peat swamp forests in Borneo. He was awarded the M. King Hubbert award for major contributions to the groundwater industry, the Prince Sultan bin Abdulaziz International Prize for Water and the Geological Society of America Meinzer Award for fundamental contributions to hydrology.

George Peridas
Director, Carbon Management Partnerships at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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George Peridas

Director, Carbon Management Partnerships at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

George Peridas is the Energy Program Director, Carbon Management Partnerships at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. He is responsible for promoting partnerships that result in the advancement and deployment of carbon management solutions and technologies, including the removal of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, or so-called negative emissions. George’s recent experience of over a decade in the environmental NGO world has made him well versed in the fields of policy, legislation and regulation relevant to climate change, carbon management and energy, and keenly aware of the spectrum of views that need to be reconciled in order to reach meaningful consensus in this field.

George’s background in energy markets consulting and scientific research in an academic environment enable him to translate complex information into lay language in order to advance multiple goals.

Kurt House
CEO of KoBold Metals

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Kurt House

CEO of KoBold Metals

Kurt is an entrepreneur who works at the interface of technology and natural resources. He was previously an Adjunct Professor in Stanford University’s Energy Resources Engineering Department. And before that, he founded a carbon sequestration and enhanced oil recovery business as well as a direct investment platform to acquire North American natural gas assets based on a proprietary, physics-based tool that more accurately forecast natural gas production from hydraulically fractured wells.

Previously, Kurt was a KAUST Research Fellow at MIT where he studied the chemistry and physics of CO2 capture and storage. He received his Ph.D. from Harvard University in earth & planetary science for similar work and his B.A. in physics from the Claremont Colleges. Kurt has also worked in private equity and corporate advising for Bain & Company.

In this Episode

One of the most controversial parts of the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act – the most ambitious climate spending bill in history – was the large pot of federal dollars that could now subsidize the nascent Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) industry. The bill provides for the expansion of the 45Q tax credit, which now allocates up to $85 per metric ton of CO2 that is captured from a point source of emissions like power plants or factories, and then is injected deep underground for permanent storage. At this price point, the IRA provides – for the first time ever – a viable revenue stream for most CCS projects.

Proponents of CCS argue that CO2 reductions will need to happen faster than the world can dismantle its dependence on fossil fuels and thus investment in carbon management technologies need to start now. Opponents say that investments in CCS divert funding from lower cost decarbonization efforts, thus slowing net carbon reductions, and that they incentivize polluting industries to continue their operations.

In this episode, Climate Now has brought together four experts to examine the arguments both for and against CCS. Join us and our guests Charles F. Harvey (MIT), Kurt House (KoBold Metals), Sue Hovorka (UT Austin) and George Peridas (LLNL) for a moderated discussion about what role – if any – CCS should play in the path to global net zero.

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