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Hosted by The importance and current status of CCS in South Africa Global CCS Institute COP 17 Side Event: What is CCS and why is it so important? - 30 November 2011 Brendan Beck Manager South Africa Centre for CCS

The importance and current status of CCS in South Africa - Brendan Beck, South Africa Centre for CCS

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This is a presentation delivered by Brendan Beck, Manager at the South Africa Centre for CCS, at the Institute’s COP 17 side event, held on November 30. The presentation reviews South Africa’s electricity sector and projected growth, as well as why South Africa has chosen to pursue CCS as a climate change mitigation option.

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Page 1: The importance and current status of CCS in South Africa - Brendan Beck, South Africa Centre for CCS

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The importance and current status of CCS in South Africa

Global CCS Institute COP 17 Side Event: What is CCS and why is it so important? - 30 November 2011

Brendan Beck – Manager South Africa Centre for CCS

Page 2: The importance and current status of CCS in South Africa - Brendan Beck, South Africa Centre for CCS

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Core Parties

Participants

coal

Page 3: The importance and current status of CCS in South Africa - Brendan Beck, South Africa Centre for CCS

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South Africa’s energy context Total primary energy consumption

Electricity generation

Page 4: The importance and current status of CCS in South Africa - Brendan Beck, South Africa Centre for CCS

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Supply Transform Transport End use

Oil

Natural Gas

Coal

Gas

Electricity Eskom and Others

Coal

PetroSA

Export Road/Rail

Pipeline

Oil Refineries Rail Road Pipeline

Liquid Fuels

Biomass Wood Person/Road

Hydro

Nuclear

Transmission Wires

“Washery”

Koeberg

Sasol

Page 5: The importance and current status of CCS in South Africa - Brendan Beck, South Africa Centre for CCS

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“Developing countries are ready to play their part in reducing global emissions, but obviously rich countries have to take the lead”

“With financial and technological support from developed countries, South Africa for example will be able to reduce emissions by 34% below business as usual by 2020 and 42% by 2025”

“We want a complete and legally binding agreement”

- President Jacob Zuma, Copenhagen 2008

South Africa: committed to addressing climate change

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Long-term mitigation scenarios

Source: SA long-term mitigation scenarios

Mt

CO

2 e

qu

ival

en

t

Page 7: The importance and current status of CCS in South Africa - Brendan Beck, South Africa Centre for CCS

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South African CCS Roadmap •2004 2010 2016 2020 2025

x 10,000t x 100,000t

x 1,000,000t

Page 8: The importance and current status of CCS in South Africa - Brendan Beck, South Africa Centre for CCS

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SOURCE: CSIR/DME

South African CO2 Emissions

Page 9: The importance and current status of CCS in South Africa - Brendan Beck, South Africa Centre for CCS

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PetroSA

SOURCE: PetroSA

Page 10: The importance and current status of CCS in South Africa - Brendan Beck, South Africa Centre for CCS

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South African CCS Roadmap 2004 2010 2016 2020 2025

DONE

x 10,000t x 100,000t

x 1,000,000t

Page 11: The importance and current status of CCS in South Africa - Brendan Beck, South Africa Centre for CCS

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Page 12: The importance and current status of CCS in South Africa - Brendan Beck, South Africa Centre for CCS

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12

Page 13: The importance and current status of CCS in South Africa - Brendan Beck, South Africa Centre for CCS

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South African CCS Roadmap 2004 2010 2016 2020 2025

x 10,000t x 100,000t

x 1,000,000t

DONE DONE

Page 14: The importance and current status of CCS in South Africa - Brendan Beck, South Africa Centre for CCS

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Objectives

• Demonstrate CO2 storage in South African conditions

• Gain experience and develop South African capacity in handling and storing CO2

• Provide an educational facility for public and stakeholders

Page 15: The importance and current status of CCS in South Africa - Brendan Beck, South Africa Centre for CCS

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Context

• Builds on South African experience • Council for Geoscience • Industry (PetroSA, Sasol, Afrox, etc) • Academia

• Draw on international experience • Test Injection Scoping Study underway with BGS and

TNO • Capacity building trips to Australia, UK, Norway • Members of IEA GHG, CSLF, GCCSI • Bilateral discussions with project developers

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Work programmes

CO2 Test Injection

Public engagement

Financial

Technical Management

Legal

Capacity building

Page 17: The importance and current status of CCS in South Africa - Brendan Beck, South Africa Centre for CCS

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SACCCS international support

• EuropeAid

• UK Government

• EU Government

• Norwegian Government

• Global CCS Institute

• IEA

• IEA GHG

• World Bank

• CSLF

• IPAC-CO2

Page 18: The importance and current status of CCS in South Africa - Brendan Beck, South Africa Centre for CCS

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Page 19: The importance and current status of CCS in South Africa - Brendan Beck, South Africa Centre for CCS

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CCR Expo: Stand 91

Page 20: The importance and current status of CCS in South Africa - Brendan Beck, South Africa Centre for CCS

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Email: [email protected]

Phone: +27 1 0201 4721

Website: www.sacccs.org.za