Energy Technologies Institute (2016): The evidence for deploying Bioenergy
with CCS (BECCS) in the UK. With assistance of Geraldine Newton-Cross,
Dennis Gammer. Loughborough. Available online at
http://www.eti.co.uk/insights/the-evidence-for-deploying-bioenergy-with-ccs-
beccs-in-the-uk.

 

Bioenergy technologies when combined with Carbon Capture and Storage (BECCS)
can deliver negative emissions (net removal of CO2 from the atmosphere)
whilst producing energy in the form of electricity, heat, gaseous and liquid
fuels.

Negative emissions provide important emissions 'headroom' as the UK
transitions towards a low-carbon energy system, since the additional
'breathing space' afforded by negative emissions reduces the need for rapid
emissions reductions in sectors such as heavy duty transport and aviation
which are more difficult and expensive to decarbonise. Evidence from ESME,
the ETI's peer-reviewed energy system modelling environment, suggests that
by the 2050s, BECCS could deliver c.-55 million tonnes of net negative
emissions per annum (approximately half our emissions target in 2050),
whilst meeting c.10% of the UK's future energy demand. This would reduce the
cost of meeting the UK's 2050 GHG emissions target by up to 1% of GDP.

 

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