Frontiers in Energy Research (May 2018)

Bearing the Cost of Stored Carbon Leakage

  • Adriano Vinca,
  • Adriano Vinca,
  • Johannes Emmerling,
  • Johannes Emmerling,
  • Massimo Tavoni,
  • Massimo Tavoni,
  • Massimo Tavoni

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fenrg.2018.00040
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6

Abstract

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Carbon capture and sequestration (CCS) is considered a key technology for stabilizing climate change. However, leakage of CO2 from stored carbon can potentially undermine the value of carbon storage as a mitigation option. Thus, monitoring and verifiability of CO2 storage should be encouraged through policy provisions such as accounting and pricing of leaked emissions. Here we assess different institutional and economic mechanisms for accounting for carbon leakage. Using an integrated assessment model we quantify the impacts on the climate, the economy and the mitigation strategies. Results show that carbon leakage can reduce the share of fossil based CCS by up to 35%, if it is controlled and correctly priced. Biomass based CCS is less affected. Accounting for leakage leads to an increase of climate policy costs of up to 0.4 percentage points due to increased emissions.

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