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Carbon Capture, Utilization and Storage

Carbon Capture, Utilization and Storage (CCUS) technologies involve the capture of carbon dioxide (CO₂) from fuel combustion or industrial processes, the transport of this CO₂ via ship or pipeline, and either its use as a resource to create valuable products or services or its permanent storage underground.
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Liability for Sequestered CO2: The Path Forward for Alberta

2013
Scholarly Work
Mike Fernandez, Chad Leask, Chris Arnot
This paper highlights the benefits Alberta has obtained from the passage of carbon capture and storage (CCS) legislation and summarizes some of the work taking place via the Regulatory Framework Assessment (RFA).

Alberta’s Energy Future in Carbon Capture and Storage: A Comparative Analysis of CCS Legislation

2013
Scholarly Work
Megan Lancashire
This report examines the CCS legislation passed in Wyoming, Kansas, Montana and the States of Victoria and Queensland in Australia to generate an understanding of the positive and negative elements of written CCS legislation in Alberta.

Carbon Capture & Storage Summary Report of the Regulatory Framework Assessment

2013
Scientific Report
The Steering Committee of the Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) Regulatory Framework Assessment
This report recommends regulatory changes related to the technical, environmental, safety, and monitoring requirements for the safe deployment of CCS as well as other actions to increase the body of knowledge on CCS-related topics.

Risk Assessment and Management Associated with CCS

2013
Scholarly Work
Behdeen Oraee-Mirzamani, Tim Cockerill, Zen Makuch
This paper carries out a policy review to assess the risks involved in the CCS industry and identifies uncertainties with regards to the risks that make policy making and insuring CCS projects very difficult.

CCS projects as Kyoto Protocol CDM activities

2013
Scholarly Work
Tim Dixon, Gregory Leamon, Paul Zakkour, Luke Warren
This paper analyses the December 2011 decision by the meetings of the UNFCCC in Durban, South Africa, to adopt modalities and procedures for CCS as clean development mechanism (CDM) project activities under the Kyoto Protocol.

Carbon Capture & Storage Policy in China

2013
Scholarly Work
Yan Gu
This paper examines the state of CCUS in China as well as the related climate change policy, laws, and initiatives that might be used to encourage the large-scale deployment of carbon sequestration in China.

Digging Deep: Property Rights in Subterranean Space and the Challenge of Carbon Capture and Storage

2013
Scholarly Work
Jill Morgan
This paper considers the extent of a surface landowner's rights above and below land and explores the treatment of underground space within the context of CCS in relation to differing jurisdictions, with particular attention paid to the U.S. and U.K.

The legal framework for carbon capture and storage (CCS)

2013
Scholarly Work
S. Bell
This book chapter provides an overview of relevant international law for CCS and an analysis of the key provisions of European Directive 2009/31/EC on the geological storage of CO2.

Carbon Capture and Storage and the London Protocol: Recent Efforts to Enable Transboundary CO2 Transfer

2013
Scholarly Work
Justine Garrett, Sean McCoy
This paper reviews international actions to remove the legal obstacles associated with the prohibition on transboundary CO2 transfer under the London Protocol.

The European Commission’s Consultative Communication on the Future of Carbon Capture and Storage in Europe

2013
Think Tank Report
John Scowcroft, Christopher Short, Mark Bonner
This is the Global CCS Institute submission in response to the European Commission’s Consultative Communication on the Future of Carbon Capture and Storage in Europe.

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