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Occidental-backed company will build new U.S. CO2 removal plant

A new venture backed by U.S. oil and gas producer Occidental Petroleum Corp will develop the largest ever facility to pull carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere through a process known as direct air capture, the companies said.

Occidental’s venture capital arm, Oxy Low Carbon Ventures LLC, has formed a company with sustainability-focused private equity firm Rusheen Capital Management LLC to license the direct air capture (DAC) technology developed by Canada’s Carbon Engineering.

Interest in DAC has grown in recent years, from companies seeking to offset their climate impact to public officials worried about the slow pace of international agreements to cut emissions.

The cost of carbon-removal technologies like DAC however is high, and they have yet to be deployed on a mass scale. Environmentalists have also argued that they reflect a lack of resolve to end the use of fossil fuels.

The new company, 1PointFive, will develop a facility located on 100 acres in Texas’ Permian Basin. It aims to capture up to 1 million metric tons of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere a year, the companies said in a joint statement.

Construction will begin in 2022, allowing time to improve plant design and reduce costs. The project will seek financing in the market.

Carbon dioxide captured at the Texas facility will be stored underground and used to increase pressure in the oil field and speed up production.

The project will benefit from a federal tax credit designed to spur investment in carbon capture and sequestration projects.

Carbon Engineering has a pilot plant in British Columbia that has been operating since 2015.

The United Nations has said carbon removal technology will be necessary to limit the increase in planetary warming to no more than 1.5 degrees Celsius, the goal of the 2015 Paris Climate Agreement. (Reporting by Nichola Groom and Valerie Volcovici; Editing by Steve Orlofsky and Jan Harvey)

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Comments

Comments

jimmy.kumana@gmail.com • 8/20/20 9:48 PM
It makes no thermodynamic or economic sense to capture ppm levels of CO2 at VERY h8gh cost when they are emitting % levels from the flue gas stacks. This is merely a delaying tactic, a ploy to bolster the deceptive argument that the technology for mitigating CO2 emissions is not yet mature., and too costly. Shame on Occidental. They can fool the ignorant public, but not us Chem Engineers; but I suppose in the current anti-science culture, that is good enough to achieve their objective..
Jeffrey Ibbotson • 8/20/20 1:19 PM
Absolute White Elephant. Creates more CO2 than it captures. Waste of money. Poor technology can be proven by any University Faculty of Chemical Engineering
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