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    UK Report Examines CO2 Shipping Costs

Summary

A report launched ahead of a UK summit on carbon capture and storage (CCS) estimates the costs of liquefying, then shipping or piping CO2 offshore.

by: Mark Smedley

Posted in:

Natural Gas & LNG News, Europe, Carbon, Political, Ministries, News By Country, Norway, United Kingdom

UK Report Examines CO2 Shipping Costs

The unit cost of liquefying and shipping carbon dioxide over a distance of 600km and a time frame of 20 years is estimated at £10 per metric ton CO2 if ships are used, but double that if purpose-built pipelines are used, according to a report by consultancy Element Energy for the UK government released November 28.

The study ‘Shipping CO2 – UK Cost Estimation Study’ can be accessed here, and the figures above are included under its Figure 1-3. It finds that roughly one-third of the estimated cost will be to liquefy the CO2, one third on shipping, and one-third on other costs including harbour fees. Costs of final undersea storage sites are not factored in.

Port-to-port shipping is likely to be significantly cheaper than utilising a CO2 pipeline, the report argues, but it notes that the potential for achieving cost savings by re-using existing infrastructure is higher for the pipeline option. It also says a higher CO2 flow rate decreases the unit cost. If using ships, the report questions whether real savings are achieved by converting vessels such as LPG carriers to carry CO2.

The report draws heavily on cost estimates done in Norway, where the government and industry are looking to develop a 1.5mn mt/yr carbon capture and storage (CCS) project using ships to carry the CO2.

It was released as an international summit on CCS taking place in Edinburgh, November 28, co-organised by the UK government and International Energy Agency. Plans for a full-chain CCS project in northeast England, including use of some CO2 by industry, were also announced the same day just ahead of this summit.