Work Area
Carbon Capture
Viewing page 11 of 35
-
Ten-T vote in European Parliament omits CO2 transport options
Brussels – Today, the European Parliament’s Committee on Transport and Tourism failed to explicitly endorse diverse, flexible modes of CO2 transport as a key element of the Trans-European Transport Network (TEN-T). The TEN-T regulation is a critical opportunity to incentivise decarbonisation projects in the transportation space. Clean Air Task Force…
-
CATF’s John Thompson appointed to carbon capture task force within the White House Council on Environmental Quality
Clean Air Task Force’s John Thompson was recently appointed to serve on the White House Council on Environmental Quality Carbon Dioxide Capture, Utilization and Sequestration Non-Federal Lands Permitting Task Force.
-
Clean Air Task Force Response to the European Commission’s Consultation on List of Candidate Projects of Common Interest: CO2 Networks
CATF strongly supports the inclusion of projects in the thematic area of cross-border carbon dioxide transport infrastructure in the 1st Union list of Projects of Common Interest (PCIs) and Projects of Mutual Interest (PMIs) under the revised TEN-E regulation. Many of the candidate projects have significant potential to deliver the…
-
Europe’s Net-Zero Industry Act: What does it mean for carbon capture and storage?
Four key measures the Net-Zero Industry Act provides for carbon capture and storage deployment in Europe.
-
Open Letter: NGOs call for clear and robust regulations to govern the use of carbon removals
Clean Air Task Force joins seven leading NGOs in calling for the European Commission to develop a clear and robust Carbon Removal Certification Framework.
-
Porthos and Beyond: The Critical Importance of Carbon Capture and Storage Projects for Dutch Climate Goals
Porthos is Europe’s most advanced carbon capture and storage project that will make the Port of Rotterdam a decarbonisation hub. Without projects like Porthos, the Netherlands’ and the EU’s climate goals will be unattainable.
-
Mapping the cost of carbon capture and storage in Europe
As Europe strives to reach its ambitious goal of climate neutrality by 2050, there is growing recognition that carbon capture and storage will be crucial to cutting emissions at the necessary speed and scale.
-
Europe’s cross-border CO2 networks start to take shape
In December, the European Commission released a list of the 18 projects competing to be formally recognised as key pieces within the EU’s emerging infrastructure for the transport and storage of CO2.