Carbon capture and storage (CCS) is an emission mitigation technology that will play a critical role in limiting global warming. It will be instrumental in decarbonizing hard-to-replace industries, such as gas-fired power plants. Thus, CCS will supplement renewable energy, hydrogen, and nuclear power in curbing global carbon emissions.
The world is increasingly reeling under the impacts of climate change. Extreme temperatures and draught are wreaking havoc in regions, such as Europe and North America. This has intensified the need to work collectively towards restricting temperature increases to under 2° Celsius from pre-industrial levels. In its Sixth Assessment Report released in March 2022, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) suggested several pathways to achieve this goal. The majority of these involved CCS.
The world is increasingly reeling under the impacts of climate change. Extreme temperatures and draught are wreaking havoc in regions, such as Europe and North America. This has intensified the need to work collectively towards restricting temperature increases to under 2° Celsius from pre-industrial levels. In its Sixth Assessment Report released in March 2022, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) suggested several pathways to achieve this goal. The majority of these involved CCS.
Scope
- This report assesses the worldwide potential for CCS deployment across the energy sector.
- It highlights the various industry, technology and regulatory trends influencing the CCS theme.
- It evaluates the global active and upcoming CCS projects in the energy sector.
- It analyses the CCS value chain and identifies major players across different elements of the value chain.
- The report also provides an overview of the competitive positions held by leading oil and gas players in the CCS theme.
Reasons to Buy
- Know about CCS and its potential role in decarbonizing the energy sector
- Identify the key trends supporting the global adoption of CCS technologies.
- Review the adotion of CCS across different segments within the energy sector.
- Understand the CCS value chain and identify the oil and gas leaders with this space.
- Identify and benchmark key oil and gas players in the CCS theme.
Table of Contents
Executive Summary- Players
- Technology Briefing
- Publisher's energy transition framework
- Need for carbon sequestration
- Trends
- Oil & gas sector trends
- Technology trends
- Regulatory trends
- Industry Analysis
- Global CCS capacity in the energy sector
- CCS Capacity by sector
- Competitive landscape
- M&A activities
- Value Chain
- CO2 emission source
- CO2 capture and separation
- CO2 transportation
- CO2 end product
- Oilfield services
- Companies
- Oil & gas companies
- Service companies
- Glossary
- Further Reading
- Thematic Research Methodology
- About the Publisher
- Contact the Publisher
Companies Mentioned (Partial List)
A selection of companies mentioned in this report includes, but is not limited to:
- Equinor
- ExxonMobil
- Occidental Petroleum
- Shell
- TotalEnergies SE
- Air Products
- Air Liquide
- Mitsubishi Heavy Industries