Poster's note : the referenced paper has a very short abstract, so I'm
sharing this blog post instead. Please read the post online if possible,
where important links and formatting are preserved.

http://dcgeoconsortium.org/2014/11/30/wil-burns-new-study-assesses-potential-challenges-to-beccs-deployment/

New study assesses potential challenges to BECCS deployment – Wil Burns

Recent studies make it increasingly clear that the globe is poised to blow
past the 2°C “guardrail” that climate scientists and Parties to the UNFCCC
have identified as critical to avoid dangerous climatic impacts, with
current projections of temperature increases of 3-4°C or more by the end of
the century.Such sobering scenarios have intensified interest in climate
geoengineering options, including one focused on in the IPCC’s Fifth
Assessment Report’s discussion of geoengineering, bioenergy with carbon
capture and storage (BECCS). BECCS, which combines bio-energy production
(biomass fuel-power stations, pulp mills and bio-fuel plants) with carbon
capture and storage technology, has the potential to generate “negative
emissions” that could help society avoid exceeding critical thresholds in
this century and beyond. It is generally placed under the rubric of climate
geoengineering strategies termed “carbon dioxide removal” options, in
contrast to strategies that seek to reduce incoming solar radiation to
reduce total radiative forcing. The IPCC’s AR5 Working Group 3 assessed
over 1000 emission pathways to 2100, concluding that most scenarios leading
to atmospheric concentration levels of CO2eq of 430-480 (101 of 116)
require global net negative emissions in the second half of the century, as
well as approximately a third of the scenarios leading to atmospheric CO2eq
concentration levels of 480-7200 ppm in 2100.

In a new study published in the journal Nature Climate Change, Sabine Fuss,
et al. assess the potential and challenges facing large-scale deployment of
BECCS.  Among their conclusions:In considering the full range of IPCC
scenarios, global net emissions would need to begin in approximately 2070
under scenarios seeking to keep temperature increases at the possible
lowest levels, and progressively later for high-temperature stabilization
levels;Integrated Assessment Models in AR5 consistent with warming of less
than 2°C yield BECCS ranges of 2-10 GtCO2 annually in 2050, corresponding
to 5-25% of 2010 CO2 Current oceanic and terrestrial carbon sinks are
approximately 19.5 GtCO2; thus, BECCS (and Carbon Capture and
Sequestration) deployment of this magnitude will require “huge efforts;”

There will be four major challenges to deploy BECCS on a large scale,
including:

Physical constraints and tradeoffs with other land and biomass demands.
BECCS deployment may require at least 100 EJ yr-1of biomass availability,
perhaps as much as 300 EJ year-1; this could create substantial land
competition with crops, biodiversity conservation and water demand;
Responses of land and ocean sinks to BECCS. Decreasing terrestrial and
oceanic sink efficiencies related to climate change could increase the need
for negative emissions;
Costs and financing. Deployment of BECCS at sufficient scale requires
attention to current decisions given its long lead time in comparison to
many solar radiation management options that may carry greater risks;
Socio-institutional barriers. CDR strategies, including BECCS will require
“an extraordinary global regulatory framework taking into account national
economic conditions. This will include extensive monitoring, reporting and
verification;”

Negative emissions strategies could help facilitate responses by countries
that might not choose to engage in emissions mitigation.

Among the additional questions this article suggests are the following:
If, as the article suggests, that there may be tradeoffs between BECCS and
other land uses, including for food production, how should a regulatory
regime determine the optimal mix of these tradeoffs, and how does one
involve the relevant stakeholders?

Given the imposing costs associated with BECCS, how would society establish
an adequate price signal to incentivize deployment?
Are there scenarios under which it would make sense to deploy CDR and SRM
strategies simultaneously or in sequence?

Wil Burns, PhD, is the co-Executive Director of the Washington
Geoengineering Consortium and a Scholar in Residence at the School of
International Service, at American University.  From 2012 to 2014 he
founded and directed the MS in Energy Policy and Climate Program at Johns
Hopkins University, where he taught courses in domestic and international
climate change law and domestic energy law. He holds a PhD in International
Environmental Law from the University of Wales-Cardiff School of Law. He
also serves as the Co-Chair of the International Environmental Law
Committee of the American Branch of the International Law Association and
is the President of the Association of Environmental Studies and Sciences.
He is also the former Co-Chair of the International Environmental Law
interest group of the American Society of International Law. He has taught
at Williams College, Colby College, Santa Clara University School of Law
and the Monterey Institute of International Studies of Middlebury College.

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