Leatherhead (November 2, 2006) -- Exxon Mobil Corporation today announced its
participation in a major European research initiative aimed at evaluating the
role that Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) technology may play in reducing
greenhouse gas emissions.
ExxonMobil will contribute over one
million euros and provide expert technical guidance to the CO2ReMoVe
project, sponsored by the European Commission Directorate General for
Research. Over the next five years, CO2ReMoVe will evaluate a range of
technologies to monitor the injection and storage of carbon dioxide (CO2) from
gas streams at the Sleipner field in the Norwegian North Sea, the Snohvit
field in the Barents Sea, at In Salah in the southern Saharan desert in
Algeria and in the German locality of Ketzin. ExxonMobil shares in the
ownership of the North Sea Sleipner gas field where over one million tonnes of
CO2 have been sequestered each year since 1998.
The project
aims to provide a sound scientific basis for establishing guidelines for the
certification of future sites for CO2 storage.
“Carbon
Capture and Storage is a long-term option with significant potential to reduce
CO2 emissions from large sources such as electricity generation,” said Sherri
Stuewer, vice-president, Safety, Health and Environment, Exxon Mobil
Corporation. “The technology for CCS exists today, but the challenge is to
further demonstrate its effectiveness and integrity and to reduce its cost.
CO2ReMoVe will play a major role in advancing CCS technology, by
monitoring and verifying storage of CO2.”
CCS
technology separates CO2 from a gas stream, compresses it to reduce volume,
transports it by pipeline to a storage site and sequesters it in geological
formations. The technology could have a major impact on greenhouse gas
emissions as it could be applicable to many large-emission sources of CO2. The
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change estimates that these large
facilities, primarily electricity generation plants, account for nearly 60 per
cent of global emissions from energy use.
ExxonMobil is a
global leader in the use of technologies that comprise CCS. The corporation
has developed and used these technologies for many years commercially at
industrial scale in operations that capture CO2 from oil and gas production,
transport CO2 to injection sites by pipeline, and inject gas and liquids into
oil fields as part of enhanced oil recovery and other operations. A key
element of the corporation's support for CO2ReMoVe will be the
participation of technical experts from ExxonMobil’s Upstream Research Company.
Along with ExxonMobil, energy industry participants in the CO2ReMoVe
project include BP, ConocoPhillips, Schlumberger, Statoil, Total, Vattenfall
and Wintershall.
Other participants include the International
Energy Agency; DNV, an organisation specialising in risk management in the oil
and gas industry; and a number of national agencies and academic research
organisations. The European Union will contribute eight million euros to the
project, with the balance of seven million euros coming from the other
participants. The project will be coordinated by the Netherlands Organisation
for Applied Scientific Research (TNO).
In addition to
CO2ReMoVe, ExxonMobil is also an active supporter of other research into
climate science and technologies to reduce the risks of climate change.
ExxonMobil worked to establish and is providing $100 million to Stanford
University’s Global Climate and Energy Project (GCEP), a major long-term
research programme designed to accelerate development of a range of
commercially viable energy technologies that can lower greenhouse emissions on
a world scale. Research into CCS forms an important part of GCEP.
CCS is also the subject of ExxonMobil-supported research at the International
Energy Agency Greenhouse Gas R&D Programme, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology and the University of Texas. ExxonMobil also conducts internal
research into CCS-related technologies to support the corporation’s commercial
operations.
Notes to editors See also:
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The project
press release issued by the Netherlands Organisation for Applied
Scientific Research (TNO) who are coordinating the initiative.
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Capturing Carbon an Opinion Editorial published by Exxon Mobil Corporation.
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And, to learn more about Carbon Capture and Storage, see the report
Tomorrow's Energy (PDF).
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