The government plans to regulate carbon capture technologies – but who will be the regulating agency?

Theconversation

The government plans to regulate carbon capture technologies – but who will be the regulating agency?"


Play all audios:

Loading...

Newly released documents add more detail to the government’s plans for a regulatory framework to enable carbon capture and storage. But they show indecision on two key matters – the legal


framework and the agency that would be in charge. The plan relates primarily to conventional carbon capture and storage technologies, which remove carbon dioxide from an industrial gas flow


and dispose of it deep underground. It also covers some methods of carbon dioxide removal, an emerging but as yet commercially untested suite of technologies such as enhanced rock


weathering, bio-energy capture and direct air capture. The latter technologies are not predicated on fossil fuel consumption and could operate in many different situations. Neither kind of


carbon removal is a simple answer to the climate challenge and the priority remains on cutting emissions. But we need to have regulatory frameworks in place for both reduction and removal


technologies of all kinds, and soon. EARNING CREDITS FROM EMISSIONS TRADING Both types of technologies will benefit from the government’s decision to allow companies to get credits in the


New Zealand Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS) for the disposal of carbon dioxide from any source. Credits will not be tied to any one technology, according to the released policy discussion


documents. It’s also a positive development that an operator can get credits as a separate removal activity, not merely as a reduction of an existing emissions liability (although official


advice was initially against separate credits). This allows for diversity in the players and the systems for removals. The government has decided it will assume liability for any carbon


dioxide leaks from geological storage, but only after verification that fluids in the subsurface are behaving as expected after closure, and no sooner than 15 years after closure. Leaks this


long after injection are unlikely, but we nevertheless need strong regulation, financial assurance to guarantee remedial action and clear liability rules. The government also states ETS


credits will only be available for removals that can be recognised internationally against New Zealand’s commitments to cut emissions. This would apply only to geological storage but not


deep-ocean deposition or rock weathering. But that’s not quite right. The general international rules already allow the inclusion in a national greenhouse gas inventory of removals from any


process. Detailed methodologies for carbon dioxide removal are likely to become available within the next few years. With change underway, New Zealand’s new regime should allow a wide range


of removal methods to receive credits. A NEW REGULATORY REGIME The documents acknowledge that New Zealand needs a broader regulatory regime, beyond the ETS, to cover the entire process of


carbon dioxide removal. The suitability of a disposal site must be verified, a detailed geological characterisation is required and the project design and operation need to be approved.


Approval is also required for closure and post-closure plans, and systematic monitoring. Monitoring is everything; it must be accurate and verifiable but also cost effective. The operator


will have to pay for monitoring for decades after site closure. In agreeing on these features, the government is following the examples of many countries overseas, including Australia,


Canada, the UK and the EU. However, it is intriguing that the government hasn’t decided where this new regime should sit in the statute book, and who should manage it. Much of the apparently


relevant text in the documents has been redacted. Given that carbon dioxide would be stored underground, the Crown Minerals Act is one possibility. But this legislation is all about


extraction, not disposal. Although the New Zealand petroleum and minerals unit at the Ministry for Business, Innovation and Employment has expertise in regulating subsurface operations, it


focuses largely on oil and gas, not on innovative climate projects. The Resource Management Act certainly provides a regulatory approval regime, but it is awaiting reform and would need much


more than the currently proposed changes to deal with carbon capture and storage or removal properly. So would legislation covering activities within New Zealand’s exclusive economic zone.


Indeed each act would require a whole new part to be added, with its own principles and procedures. There is a lot to be said for a standalone new act, in a form that would fit with the


emerging Natural Environment Act that will replace the Resource Management Act. The new legislation and regulation regime could be administered by the Environmental Protection Authority,


which is already involved in Resource Management Act call-ins and fast-track approvals, the legislation covering the exclusive economic zone and the ETS. One can only guess there might be


tensions between contending factions in government. What we should ask for is a legislative and institutional arrangement that allows carbon capture and storage or removal technologies to


evolve and grow without being a mere offshoot of the oil and gas industry or any other existing sector. As part of our efforts to reduce emissions, we must make sure all kinds of removal


technologies are available that truly suit New Zealand.


Trending News

搜尋{電競}標籤 | udn遊戲角落

黃牛在小孩面前掃光《寶可夢》集換式卡片掀議!網駡:拍攝者不救? CDPR公開《巫師4》虛幻引擎5.6運算影片 強調為純技術展示不代表最終成品 NEURO的開發工程師VEDAL宣布6/9將回歸開發直播:V3聲音模型還沒好 大力出奇蹟?SWIT...

Amul milk price hiked by rs 2 per litre, effective from today

The Gujarat Cooperative Milk Marketing Federation (GCMMF) on Wednesday, 1 July, announced the increase in price of Amul ...

Murfreesboro veteran finds hope through va program | va tennessee valley health care | veterans affairs

It’s 7 a.m. on a workday. Marine Veteran Toby Toon sluggishly rolls himself out of bed and walks to the shower to rinse ...

Froylan garza | va el paso health care | veterans affairs

Froylan “Froy” Garza, was appointed Executive Director/CEO of the El Paso VA Health Care System (EPVHCS) on June 5, 2022...

Veteran conquers fear and shame to lead a more confident life | va eastern colorado health care | veterans affairs

Retired U.S. Air Force Master Sergeant Vera Baker-Lane, like many Veterans, tried for years to suppress the pain of post...

Latests News

The government plans to regulate carbon capture technologies – but who will be the regulating agency?

Newly released documents add more detail to the government’s plans for a regulatory framework to enable carbon capture a...

Contributor: mass shooters aren't mentally ill people who suddenly snap. They decide to kill

In the aftermath of major mass shootings, politicians and pundits depict the killers as crazed monsters and blame mental...

Coronapod: kids and covid vaccines

BENJAMIN THOMPSON AND EWEN CALLAWAY DISCUSS COVID-19 VACCINE TRIALS IN YOUNG CHILDREN. Your browser does not support the...

Jimmy buffett’s rare cancer: 5 things to know about merkel cell carcinoma

The news of Jimmy Buffett’s death has put a spotlight on a rare and aggressive type of skin cancer, known as Merkel cel...

Democratic congresswoman comes under fire for delayed firing of chief of staff accused of abuse

Democratic Rep. Elizabeth Esty (Conn.) is facing scrutiny over her handling of abuse allegations made against her former...

Top