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Companies join forces on carbon capture
and storage

London, 16 March: Thirteen companies have come to together
to form an association to promote carbon capture and storage
(CCS) technology with a call for a clearer steer from government.
"We need a clear regulatory and fiscal framework going
forward to justify CCS to shareholders," said Lord Ron
Oxburgh, former chairman of Shell Transport and Trading and
the president of the Carbon Capture & Storage Association
(CCSA), at the organisation's launch in London on Monday
The CCSA aims to promote technology for permanently storing
carbon dioxide (CO2) underground. Its members will work with
the UK government to resolve regulatory issues that might
delay the deployment of technology and to help develop the
fiscal and legislative conditions to allow for early demonstration
CCS projects.
"Fossil fuels are going to continue to be the major
source of power for the foreseeable future," said Gardiner
Hill, CCSA chairman and BP's manager for environmental technology.
"This technology has the additional advantage of providing
a 'win-win' for the environment and energy security, when
the circumstances are right for the CO2 to be used for enhanced
oil and gas recovery," he added.
CCS involves collecting CO2 from large industrial and energy-related
sources, and storing it usually in geological formations
such as oil or gas fields so that it cannot escape
to the atmosphere and contribute to global warming.
The founding members of the association are: Air Products,
Alstom, AMEC, BP, ConocoPhillips, E.ON UK, Mitsui Babcock,
Progressive Energy, Schlumberger, Scottish & Southern
Energy and Shell.
They were joined at the official launch by energy companies
RWE and Chevron, according to Jeff Chapman, CCSA chief executive-designate.
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