Geosequestration: burying our heads in the sand?
Geosequestration: burying our heads in the sand?
Climate change will impact every one of us. For this reason, governments all over the world are making moves to mitigate their greenhouse gas emissions. A new direction in energy technology research has emerged that has become very popular politically - carbon capture and sequestration or simply geo-sequestration.
Geosequestration is the capture of CO2 emitted by power stations, its compression and transport in pipelines to burial site such as underground aquifers. There has been an overseas pilot ocean sequestration project, the Sleipner project in Norway that has been operating for five years.
Climate justice and hence our campaign in Australia is based on the premise that all peoples have a right to an equitable share of the earth’s resources within ecological limits. Our position on geosequestration is based not only on equitable resource use but also the need for the minority world to dramatically reduce our greenhouse gas pollution to ensure the environment, sovereignty and livelihoods of peoples in the majority world.
Permanence and Liability
One of the biggest questions for this new technology is whether the liquefied carbon dioxide will remain where it is deposited and for how long. Estimates by the GEODISC program scientists conclude that CO2 burial sites will have to be maintained for as long as 100,000 years (Bradshaw et al 2002). There is insufficient national and international legislation to ensure that the proponents of geosequestration projects would be held liable for any leakage for this extended period of time. Current regulatory proposals by the Ministerial Council for Mineral and Petroleum Resources include government taking the liability for leakage and maintenance after the proponent (corporation) has completed the project, which is generally between 30 and 50 years. This is moves the burden to the government and therefore tax-payers for ensuring the project does not leak or contaminant surround areas for thousands of years – a completely unacceptable injustice for future generations of Australians!
Air need only be contaminated with as little as 25% CO2 to be lethal to humans and animals. Catastrophic leakages of CO2 have a precedent in the 1980 Cameroon disaster when trapped CO2 in Lake Nyos asphixyated 1700 people to death. CO2 leakage into groundwater also causes acidification.
Considering both the precautionary and the polluter-pays principles in relation to permanence and liability, geosequestration technology should be rejected as an ecological solution to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. The fact continues that the safest ‘storage’ of carbon dioxide is in the form of coal and other fossil fuels in the underground forms that they naturally occur in. If the industry is truly worried about CO2 emissions we should be moving away from fossil fuel energy sources.
Associated environmental and social issues on fossil fuel extraction and consumption
Regardless of whether geosequestration adequately ‘deals’ with the carbon emissions of combusting fossil fuels, globally there are several environmental and social burdens of extracting fossil fuels. The World Bank own extractive industry review found that extractive industries create more poverty, disease, and dislocation of peoples and greater environmental damage than the benefit brought by the trade of those primary products.
Nigeria alone has an estimated 300 oil leaks per year from badly maintained oil pipelines. Many of those energy corporations have been implicated in thousands of human rights violations and environmental mismanagement. Shell, Chevron Texaco and Exxon Mobil are well known for their involvement in oil spills and human rights abuses in the Niger Delta and Latin America. Rio Tinto, Australia’s biggest coal producer, in 2001 received a $35 million as an interest free loan from the Australian government (Bob Brown, Senate Inquiry, 2003), was implicated in human rights violations in Bougainville and PNG in the 1990’s. Geosequestration cannot be claimed as an environmental solution, as it will further entrench out dependence of fossil fuels with all of the association environmental problems of extraction and consumption.
All fossil fuel emissions contain a number of noxious substances that are harmful to human health at many levels. Smog causes acid rain that causes fauna deaths and smog particles contribute to respiratory illnesses, lung cancer and asthma; the consumption of lead enriched fuels contributes to retarded intellectual development of children, causes cancer and birth defects. Fumes and noise in industrial and traffic-heavy areas can render some areas unpleasant, indeed dangerous, for pedestrians and animals alike. Ultimately, exhaust fumes from cars are contributing in a big way to global warming. Geosequestration deals with only one of the many adverse effects of fossil fuel usage, while leaving the poverty stricken to still live in concrete highways zones and adjacent to industries, breathing in fossil fuel and other emissions. In the wider view, it is obvious that investment in non-emitting industries is always going to be the most humane option.
Investment in geosequestration technology by the biggest emitting companies will not deliver justice for the rest of the world, nor will it contribute to the alleviation of energy poverty in the global South: It will not be a useful technology for mitigating climate change for some time, if it works. If it does not, it actually makes the greenhouse gas problem worse as capturing, compressing and transporting the carbon is a very energy intensive process.
Expanding monopoly of TNCs on energy supply, technology
Geosequestration is sometimes promoted as having the possibility of being a ‘bridging’ technology that will enable the reduction of emissions whilst renewable technology and energy efficiency technology advances to the point of being able to supply our energy requirements. This position is neither practical nor realistic due to the current lack of funding for renewable technology. The table below compares research and development funding for fossil fuel and renewable energy programs made by the Australian government since 1997. Further to this record, in the Energy White Paper (2004) the government committed to itself to geosequestration research and development through the $500 million ‘Low Emissions Fund’. Whilst this fund is not for geosequestration and ‘clean coal’ per say, the funds from government need to be matched dollar for dollar from private industry – this is simply beyond the financial capacity of most of the renewable energy and energy efficiency industry.
It is naive to believe that fossil fuel TNCs will gracefully bow-out of energy generation and supply as renewable energy/energy efficiency grows. This is clear from the history of fossil fuel corporations both nationally and internationally, and in particular the behaviour of the fossil fuel cartels in attempting to undermine the international climate negotiations has been well documented by the non-government community internationally.
In Australia, the proponents of the Gorgon project, which will become the biggest geosequestration project in the world, located under A grade nature reserve, are Shell, Chevron Texaco and Exxon. For such a greenhouse pollution intensive project as this, when a cost of carbon is introduced, as will almost inevitably occur within the next decade, the project will become economically unviable. Therefore, GJV propose to inject 60% of the CO2 emissions underground. Their interest in this project is profit, not environmental protection.
If this were truly a bridging technology we would be experiencing at least equal support for geosequestration and fossil fuel technologies AND renewable energy/energy efficiency technologies. There is current no co-operative research center for renewable energy in Australia and only a tiny 2% of the energy market is dedicated to renewable energy generation. Action of both of these areas of research and market share is absolutely necessary if we are to make a transition to renewable energy.
The funding and research diverted to geosequestration technology will have long term and possibly dangerous consequences for all people affected by climate change, and for Australians both alive today and for future generations. Investment in this technology now, to the detriment of renewable energy will disadvantage the future of all of us.
No impact on over-consumption in global north
Geosequestration is an end-of-pipe solution that does not deal with primary causes of climate change: the gross overconsumption of fossil fuels by the minority world. Australia has the greatest per capita greenhouse footprint of any Annex I nation, which is an indicator of our severely unsustainable lifestyles, industry and economic systems. One of the primary response to creating climate justice is consuming less rather than relying on technological fixes that will further our dependence on fossil fuels.
Any climate justice strategy must deliver more equitable access of natural resources (including energy) to peoples across the world, thereby must not continue our fossil fuel dependence in Australia. A genuine solution to climate change would be a commitment by the Australian federal government to a 20% reduction of greenhouse gas emissions by 2020 and 60% by 2050 and the development of policy to enable the application of energy efficiency and renewable energy technologies to achieve our energy needs rather than our energy greed.
Investing so much our country’s research funds for climate change into geosequestration will divert important funding from renewable technologies that may help energy poor countries and remote areas of Australia jump the ‘technology barrier’ and circumvent going thorough an energy-intensive industrialization process to develop.
Research dollars for renewable energy technology can enable Australia to help small poorer nations to convert to sustainable energy technologies before they are caught in the fossil fuel investment cycle. This is particularly pertinent to our near neighbours in the Pacific who will suffer greatly from the impact of climate change, who are also trapped in poverty because there is limited access to electricity from which to increase their quality of life via health and education services, with increased opportunity for local enterprise.
References:
ABC, 2003, “CO2 underground: the answer to climate change of part of the problem?” broadcast on Earthbeat, February 15, 2003 transcript online at http://www.abc.net.au
ABC 2004, “Sleipner, Gorgon and Geosequestration” broadcast on The Buzz, Jluy 10, 2004 at http://www.abc.net.au
ABC, 2004 “Geosequestration Won’t Rock the World, expert” in News in Science August 4, 2004 at http://www.abc.net.au/science/news/stories/s1168015.htm
Bradshaw, J. etal, 2002, “The potential for geological sequestration of C02 in Australia: preliminary findings and implications for new gas field development. APPEA Journal, p42. Online at http://www.apcrc.com.au/Programs/GEODISC_APPEApaper2002.pdf
Davidson, P.J., Freund, P and Smith, A 2001, “Putting carbon Back into the Ground”, International Energy Agency Greenhouse Gas Research and Development Programme, p23. Online at http://www.ieagreen.org.uk/
Davidson, S. 2003, “Putting CO2 back”, ECOS magazine, No 116, July-September 2003, p22-24, CSIRO Australia.
Diesendorf, M 2003 “Propping up the old smokestack industries” in The Canberra Times April 22, 2003 p11
MacGill, I and Outhred, H 2003 “Beyond Kyoto – innovation and adaptation: A critique of the PMSEIC assessment of emission reduction options in the Australian stationary energy sector” in EcoGeneration Magazine June/July 2003
Reuters, 2004 “Using CO2 to prolong UK North Sea oil too costly” online at Planet Ark World Environment News at http://www.planetark.com/avantgo/dailynewsstory.cfm?newsid=24659
Hawkins, D.G. 2003 “Passing gas: thinking about leakage from geologic carbon storage sites”, Natural Resource Defense Council, Washington DC: USA
Tarlo, K 2003 “Comparing the risks in reducing greenhouse gas emissions: coal with geosequestration vs. sustainable energy” Institute for Sustainable Futures, University of Technology, Sydney. Presentation to Green Capital Geo-sequestration Debate, Melbourne, 30 October.
Produced for Friends of the Earth Australia
Authors: Kim Stewart and Steph Long
Ph 07 3846 5793



