http://www.shell.com/global/aboutshell/media/news-and-media-releases/2015/shell-launches-quest-carbon-capture-and-storage-project.html

Shell launches Quest carbon capture and storage project

06 Nov 2015

Shell today celebrated the official opening of the Quest carbon capture and
storage (CCS) project in Alberta, Canada, and the start of commercial
operations there. Quest is designed to capture and safely store more than
one million tonnes of carbon dioxide (CO2) each year – equal to the
emissions from about 250,000 cars. Quest was made possible through strong
collaboration between the public and private sectors aimed at advancing CCS
globally.

As part of its funding arrangements, Shell is publically sharing
information on Quest's design and processes to further global adoption of
CCS. Quest draws on techniques used by the energy industry for decades and
integrates the components of CCS for the large-scale capture, transport and
storage of CO2. CCS is one of the only technologies that can significantly
reduce carbon emissions from industrial sectors of the economy.

Speaking at the official opening, Shell’s Chief Executive Officer Ben van
Beurden said: "Quest represents a significant milestone in the successful
design, construction and use of carbon capture and storage (CCS) technology
on a commercial scale. Quest is a blueprint for future CCS projects
globally. Together with government and joint-venture partners, we are
sharing the know-how to help make CCS technologies more accessible and
cost-effective for the energy industry and other key industrial sectors of
the economy.”

Quest will capture one-third of the emissions from Shell’s Scotford
Upgrader, which turns oil sands bitumen into synthetic crude that can be
refined into fuel and other products. The CO2 is then transported through a
65-kilometre pipeline and injected more than two kms underground below
multiple layers of impermeable rock formations. Quest is now operating at
commercial scale after successful testing earlier this year, during which
it captured and stored more than 200,000 tonnes of CO2.

Quest was built on behalf of the Athabasca Oil Sands Project joint-venture
owners Shell Canada Energy (60 per cent), Chevron Canada Limited (20 per
cent) and Marathon Oil Canada Corporation (20 per cent), and was made
possible through strong support from the governments of Alberta and Canada
who provided C$865 million in funding.

Collaboration is continuing through Quest between Shell and various parties
in an effort to bring down costs of future CCS projects globally. This
includes cooperation with the United States Department of Energy, and the
British government on research at the Quest site.

“The secondment from the UK’s Energy Technologies Institute to the Quest
CCS project is an example of British and Canadian cooperation in
cutting-edge low-carbon technologies,” said Howard Drake, British High
Commissioner to Canada. “This research-focused partnership will help to
develop CCS expertise on both sides of the Atlantic in an effort to advance
the innovative solutions demonstrated at Quest.”

Support from the local community was essential to building Quest. Shell
initiated public consultation in 2008, two years before submitting a
regulatory application.

Notes to editors

CCS technology can be applied to reduce CO2 emissions across a wide range
of industrial sectors, including power generation, cement, chemicals and
refining, iron and steel and upgraders.

The governments of Alberta and Canada contributed C$745 million and C$120
million respectively to Quest, building on Canada’s leadership in CCS
deployment.

Nearly 2,000 people were involved in the Quest project. Specifically,
construction employed an average of 400 skilled workers over roughly 30
months.

Quest has a robust measurement, monitoring and verification program agreed
upon with the government and verified by a third party (Det Norske Veritas
(DNV)).

Public consultation was developed in collaboration with the Pembina
Institute, a Canadian think tank focused on energy issues. A community
advisory panel of local leaders and residents will regularly review results
from Quest’s monitoring program.

The United Kingdom’s Energy Technologies Institute, the University of
Birmingham, the British government and Shell will support an eight-month
secondment of a doctoral university student at Quest, to deliver on the UK
Canada Joint Statement on CCS issued in 2014.

Shell and the United States Department of Energy will field-test advanced
monitoring technologies alongside the state-of-the-art, comprehensive
monitoring program already in place for Quest.

Shell is involved in a slate of CCS projects worldwide. The proposed
Peterhead CCS project in the United Kingdom, currently in the design stage,
is part of the UK Government’s CCS Commercialisation Programme (subject to
investor approval and the securing of relevant permits).

Shell is a partner in the Chevron-led Gorgon project in Australia and has a
share in the Technology Centre Mongstad (TCM) in Norway.

CCS technology developed by Shell subsidiary Cansolv is in use at the
commercial-scale Boundary Dam CCS project in Saskatchewan, Canada, which
opened in 2014.

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"geoengineering" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/geoengineering.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to