Introduction

Atmospheric CO2 levels are currently at their highest in millions of years, largely due to centuries of industrialization and significant land-use changes. These human activities have disrupted the Earth's natural carbon balance, leading to increased greenhouse gas concentrations and global temperature rises. Scientists warn that this warming could lead to profound climate changes, including rising sea levels as polar ice melts.

Avoiding the most extreme effects of global warming means reducing emissions from industry and transport, as well as ceasing unsustainable land and forest management, which releases billions of tonnes of CO₂ annually.
Decarbonizing means not only transitioning from the burning fossil fuels to the use of clean energy but also preventing the release of CO2 from industries which do not have obvious pathways to cutting back emissions. In addition, it will require advancing and deploying technologies that actively remove CO2 from the atmosphere, using a combination of engineered approaches and nature-based solutions.

Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) technologies aim to target the emissions from industries which are otherwise hard to decarbonize, capturing CO2 before it reaches the air and then securely storing it deep underground.

Meanwhile, CO2 Removal (CDR)encompasses natural and engineered methods to extract CO₂ from the atmosphere and store it in sinks like trees, soils, oceans, or carbonate minerals, where it can remain for decades to millions of years.

Both CCS and CDR have the potential to play key roles in limiting global warming, but their advocates face the same challenge: proving they can be scaled enough to significantly impact future CO2 levels. Additionally, understanding the broader picture—how each approach can complement the other and integrate with broader decarbonization efforts—will be fundamental to their success.

What Are CCS and CDR?
While Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) and Carbon Dioxide Removal (CDR) share the goal of making a significant impact on future CO2 levels, they target different stages of the emission cycle and use varied approaches. CCS captures CO2 before it is emitted from industrial sources, such as power plants and cement factories, whereas CDR focuses on removing CO2 already present in the atmosphere.

Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) is an engineered technology designed to capture CO2 emissions at their source. It is particularly useful for hard-to-abate sectors like steel, cement, and chemical manufacturing, where emissions are inherent to industrial processes and difficult to eliminate. The captured CO2 is then transported to a geological formation where it is stored permanently, preventing it from entering the atmosphere. CCS focuses on preventing ongoing emissions and is particularly important for industries that cannot easily transition to low-carbon alternatives.
On the other hand, Carbon Dioxide Removal (CDR) targets legacy emissions—the CO2 already present in the atmosphere due to centuries of industrial activity. CDR includes a range of technologies and natural processes aimed at reducing atmospheric CO2 concentrations. These approaches can be broadly divided into engineered solutions, like Direct Air Capture (DAC), and nature-based solutions, such as reforestation and soil carbon sequestration.

CCS: Preventing Emissions from Industry
How CCS Works
CCS involves three main steps:

  1. Capture: CO2 is captured from industrial sources like power plants using one of several technologies—pre-combustion (removing CO₂ before fuel is burned), post-combustion (capturing CO₂ after combustion), and oxy-fuel combustion (burning fuel in pure oxygen to make CO₂ capture easier).
  2. Transport: Once captured, the CO2 is compressed into a liquid and transported to a storage site via pipelines, trucks, or ships.
  3. Storage: The CO2 is injected deep underground into geological formations, such as depleted oil fields or saline aquifers, where it is stored permanently.

Potential and Applications of CCS
CCS plays a crucial role in hard-to-abate sectors, where reducing emissions is especially challenging. For example, cement production and steel manufacturing inherently produce CO2 as part of their chemical processes. Without CCS, these industries will struggle to decarbonize.
The continued use of fossil fuels, especially coal, to generate electricity remains highly contentious given the availability of cleaner alternatives like wind and solar. However, economic and political realities in certain countries suggest that coal-fired power plants will likely remain operational for the foreseeable future. The critical question is whether CCS can offer a viable solution to reduce the environmental impact of coal combustion, or if the significant costs of installing and operating carbon capture technology—along with the logistical challenges of storing captured CO2—will render these plants economically unfeasible, particularly as the costs of renewable energy generation.
Sitting at the intersection of CCS and CDR is Bioenergy with Carbon Capture and Storage (BECCS), in which crops or other biomass is combusted to generate energy, while capturing and storing the resulting CO2 emissions. Since biomass absorbs CO₂ as it grows, and its combustion emissions are captured, BECCS offers the unique potential to generate electricity with negative emissions. However, when evaluating the overall carbon balance, it is important to account for lifecycle emissions, the CO2 released from all BECCS activities such as the cultivation, transportation, and processing of biomass.

Challenges for CCS

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CDR: Removing CO2 from the Atmosphere
How CDR Works
CDR methods focus on removing CO2 from the atmosphere and can be grouped into nature-based and engineered approaches:

  1. Nature-Based Solutions:
  2. Engineered Solutions:

Potential and Applications of CDR
CDR technologies offer the potential to achieve negative emissions, a crucial element for offsetting legacy CO2 emissions. Unlike CCS, which focuses on preventing ongoing emissions, CDR aims to reverse the damage caused by historical emissions. As the world works toward net-zero goals, CDR will become increasingly important for addressing the CO2 already present in the atmosphere.
Challenges for CDR

Complementary Roles of CCS and CDR
While CCS and CDR have distinct goals and methods, they are complementary technologies that together can form a crucial part of climate mitigation strategies:

In practice, a combination of CCS and CDR will likely be needed to meet global climate targets. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and International Energy Agency (IEA) have indicated that nearly all feasible pathways to net-zero emissions include both technologies.

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Carbon Hubs and Clusters: Collaborating to Store CO2
Capturing huge volumes of CO2 will be pointless unless there is a way to dispose of it. Developing the necessary underground storage sites as well as the infrastructure of pipelines, railways and possibly shipping terminals required to move the CO2 to these locations from the point of capture will be hugely expensive. The solutions for overcoming this is the development of carbon hubs and clusters. These hubs collect CO2 from multiple industrial sources within a region and transport it to a shared storage site. By clustering facilities together, economies of scale can be achieved, reducing costs and making CCS more financially viable.


Policy, Public Perception, and Economic Incentives
Both CCS and CDR will require robust policy support and economic incentives to scale up. Carbon pricing, for example, assigns a value to captured or removed CO2, encouraging investment in these technologies. Governments can also provide tax incentives, subsidies, or direct funding for research and development to accelerate the deployment of both CCS and CDR.
Public perception will be critical to the success of these technologies so that clear communication about their benefits, safety, and necessity will be key to gaining support.

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Conclusion
As discussed, if Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) and Carbon Dioxide Removal (CDR) are to become essential technologies in the fight against climate change, scaling them up to gigatonne levels will require significant technological innovation, policy support, public acceptance, and substantial infrastructure investment, alongside the cooperation of a wide array of industries.
Currently, neither technology can substitute for the urgent need to reduce emissions through renewable energy adoption and energy efficiency. Whether CCS and CDR become indispensable tools in achieving the deep decarbonization necessary to avoid catastrophic climate impacts will depend on the actions taken by industry and governments in the coming years.

 

The CDR & CCS Landscape...
Related Pages:
Overview
Capture vs. Remove
Research
Web Resources