Can Carbon Capture Fix the Climate Crisis? Oil Companies Hope So.

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  • čas přidán 22. 05. 2024
  • "An Open Sewer" that's how Former Vice President Al Gore, at the recent World Economic Forum in Davos said that we're treating the atmosphere given the amount of CO2 we're dumping in it. But what if we could take back the Carbon from the atmosphere and store it or, even better, remove it completely? Could that fix the Climate Crisis and get us to Net Zero? That's the hope of Carbon Capture and Storage and Carbon Dioxide Removal Companies and, perhaps unsurprisingly, Oil Companies. So we thought it was time to find out whether CCS and CDR is an effective solution, or an excuse to continue burning fossil fuels or even, a necessary sidekick to renewable energy. Join Helen as she investigates this contentious topic.
    Get your tickets for Fully Charged LIVE in Sydney on 11th & 12th March here:au.fullycharged.live/
    00:00 Too Much Carbon!
    00:53 Is Collecting Carbon an Option?
    01:25 Carbon Capture vs Removal
    03:38 Carbon Capture and Storage
    04:29 How do we Capture Carbon?
    05:39 Where does the Carbon Go?
    06:33 Is it Worth It?
    07:07 The Contentious Bit
    07:52 The Even More Contentious Bit
    09:10 Necessary Anyway?
    10:10 Carbon Dioxide Removal
    12:23 How Effective Is It Really?! Introducing the Time Machine!
    14:45 Where Does this Leave Us?
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    #cleanenergy #carboncapture #electricvehicles #evs #climatecrisis #climatechange #sustainability #carbon #carbondioxide #technology #climatetech
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 442

  • @idrisb07
    @idrisb07 Před rokem +83

    As someone currently doing research in climate change mitigation, I found this concise yet quite accurate, which is seldom the case when a CZcams channel decides to make a 15-minute video about some complex scientific subject. Well done!

    • @IanKath
      @IanKath Před rokem +3

      I particually like Helen's cut to the facts approach to science communications. And she lives on a bicycle so walks the talk.

    • @gilesmccleary1890
      @gilesmccleary1890 Před rokem +2

      Me too but BECCS is not good it's not waste wood it's leading to deforestation look in to it. It's a joke

    • @idrisb07
      @idrisb07 Před rokem

      @@gilesmccleary1890 I’ve never understood BECCS either but speaking recently to a representative of a company that is considering BECCS, apparently the trees they burn are sourced from so-called working forests

    • @jimskirtt5717
      @jimskirtt5717 Před rokem

      Idris, why should we 'mitigate climate change'? What temperature would you like the Earth to be?
      What, to you, is the optimum level for CO2 in the atmosphere?
      Would you prefer cooler temperatures, or warmer?

    • @stephendoherty8291
      @stephendoherty8291 Před rokem

      @@jimskirtt5717 The planet has been heating since the 1870's due to man. The optimum level of C02 is not a higher one than the earth does naturally (and the 8 billion citizens). Higher temps mean drought/stronger hurricanes/plant loss/wildlife loss/rising saltwater sealevels/snow loss (and then even faster heat rises and more heat is absorbed and not reflected)water shortages (and wars to keep your dwindling share)/flash floods and then humans trying to live and work in ever higher daytime (and sleep as well) temperatures/coral and fish-seafood loss. Oh and we'll never capture all that human generated C02 as most of it is heading upwards to turbo-charge the planets greenhouse effect.

  • @TadeuszCantwell
    @TadeuszCantwell Před rokem +28

    One of the aspects of growing plants to store carbon is the depleted sea grass meadows around Europe. This would have the benefit of boosting aquatic life as well.

  • @patreekotime4578
    @patreekotime4578 Před rokem +94

    I feel like mostly its a boondoggle. A bridge to nowhere that makes these companies bookoos of money while doing nothing except raising the cost of petrochemical products.
    We already have a good example of how good stewards energy companies are: coal fly ash slurry ponds. These are used to make coal into "clean coal". Some of the nastiest particulates are captured and stored in giant settling ponds, presumably to eventually be buried. This is a common strategy used by many industries for dealing with byproducts. But the problem with settling ponds is that they concentrate toxic waste, which in the case of coal includes radioactive elements. And these are just earthen damns which can leak, or more disasterously, can be ruptuered and the waste can flood downhill. There are several cases in recent years of highly toxic coal fly ash slurry ponds rupturing in Tenneessee and North Carolina. These have in some cases washed out entire towns (it is unclear if the people were allowed to move back or what the long term impacts were) and at least once a slurry pond located directly beside a river used as a city water source burst contaminating the entire water supply. That wasnt the 1970s, that was 2008. I DO NOT trust that these same companies will suddenly know how to securely store carbon or be willing to put the money in to do it properly when they havnt even been safely storing literal radioactive waste.
    Also, how are they going to get the carbon to these deep wells with solid bedrock? Transport it by bunker-fuel powered container-ships? Seems more likely they will just toss it down the nearest leaky fracking well and call it a day.

    • @johncritic-doe4504
      @johncritic-doe4504 Před rokem

      As long the worlds energy is running mostly on fossil fuels, any kind of energy intensive carbon capture technology is emitting more CO2 than capturing in the end. It's nothing more than the next big lie from the fossil fuel industry.

    • @alanmay7929
      @alanmay7929 Před rokem +1

      Stop talking crap about oil companies they make the millions of products that we use possible! If you don’t want just stop using those! Stop eating food that used oil to be made…..

    • @johncritic-doe4504
      @johncritic-doe4504 Před rokem +2

      @@alanmay7929 It's not about ditching something entirely but replacing it as good as possible. We may need some crude oil even in 100 Years from now. But much less than today. Especially for chemical industry.

  • @GreatCreative
    @GreatCreative Před rokem +3

    I realize the benefits of newly planted trees is minimal in the overall capture equation, but more trees help in so many other ways. And who doesn't love all that comes with trees - more stable soil, biodiversity, cooling shade, and a more beautiful environment.

  • @isaiah123456wp7
    @isaiah123456wp7 Před rokem +89

    Wow, this isn't the type of content I would expect from Fully Charged. Keep it up. I love taking a closer look at the actual energy sources and alternative green products.

    • @hollyandtheev6519
      @hollyandtheev6519 Před rokem +13

      Really? Helen has been making content like this for FC for quite a while.

    • @patreekotime4578
      @patreekotime4578 Před rokem +11

      They have done many shows in a similar vien. They transitioned away from being just a car review channel many years ago. Its worth digging through older episodes to find their most recent talk about hydrogen for instance.

    • @eclecticcyclist
      @eclecticcyclist Před rokem +7

      The arguement for EVs is already won, this is the logical next step.

    • @stevemyers2092
      @stevemyers2092 Před rokem

      not close enough re: wrap up.

    • @alanmay7929
      @alanmay7929 Před rokem

      @@eclecticcyclist the argument of EV is not won and also unfortunately EVs still very heavily relies on oil. A tesla is about 40% made from oil said sandy Munro. Millions of oil byproducts are not easily replaceable by alternatives….

  • @adamlytle2615
    @adamlytle2615 Před rokem +11

    Folks here should check out the most recent Climate Town video about coal, which touches on the utter and complete failure of "Clean coal", which was coal-fired power plant with carbon capture attached.

    • @johnowens8992
      @johnowens8992 Před rokem +1

      One example had a Gas turbine running just to power it

    • @adamlytle2615
      @adamlytle2615 Před rokem +1

      @@johnowens8992 yep, they built a whole new gas fired power plant to run it. Wild stuff.

    • @YounesLayachi
      @YounesLayachi Před rokem

      Climate Town also made excellent videos about the carbon capture and carbon offsets scams.
      very underrated channel (he has a climate science degree)

  • @mattbentley2152
    @mattbentley2152 Před rokem +40

    Great episode. Lots of facts to support the information. More episodes like this, please. Many thanks

  • @MartynDews
    @MartynDews Před rokem +23

    Excellent episode. Well delivered. Easy to understand. Keep these coming.

  • @CEUOTC
    @CEUOTC Před rokem +28

    When it comes to Fully Charged Show l am always in awe of the content and level of detail, l just wish l could press the like button more than once! Love it all, keep telling the truth!

    • @jimskirtt5717
      @jimskirtt5717 Před rokem +1

      Simon, with all due respect to you, that's exactly what they DON'T do!
      Fully Charged obfuscates. There is no optimum level of CO2. If you think there is one, tell me what it is...I'll wait. The 'alternatives' offered by Fully Charged are nothing of the sort - a heat pump isn't an alternative to a gas boiler, it's a different application of heating. Electric cars are wayyyy too expensive, and now expensive to run, too. Solar panels struggle to pay back their capital outlay - if they pay it back at all! Wind turbines are too expensive, and NEVER pay back their capital cost. It's all just a load of nonsense by Fully Charged - they play at 'finding alternatives' which are not alternatives at all, as I have just said. I saw the most absurd one of all last week - a network of tubing under your driveway to transfer warmth from the Sun to the input of your heat pump!!! I contacted the company to inform them that the capital cost would NEVER be returned...ever! And now Fully Charged drifts into nonsense about CO2 (which isn't 'carbon' by the way, as that's an atom - CO2 is a molecule). And they have the gall to quote Al Gore - the biggest liar on the planet!

    • @CEUOTC
      @CEUOTC Před rokem +3

      @@jimskirtt5717 Everyone is allowed an opinion, l am currently working on my final dissertation covering the use of electric aircraft for flight training and as such have spent the last semester carrying out the relevant research and due diligence to provide a balanced answer to my research question. So l cannot answer your question, however, l feel it is in everyone's interest to invest in technology that will reduce or offset GHG and fully understand that there is no platinum solution, but we do have to start somewhere and it will not be cheap.

    • @jimskirtt5717
      @jimskirtt5717 Před rokem

      @@CEUOTC
      Thank you for your reply. I didn't say that people aren't allowed an opinion, just the lack of comprehension as to what Fully Charged is doing. They DON'T tell the truth! You can't answer the question because there IS no optimum level of CO2 - that was the point. Can I ask you a question (since you mentioned it)? What's the principle GHG gas?

    • @CEUOTC
      @CEUOTC Před rokem +2

      @@jimskirtt5717 my research is focused on emissions from the aviation sector and GHG covers a number of emissions (Carbon Dioxide being the biggest culprit), however, other emissions include nitrous gases, water vapor, soot, sulfates, particulate matter, which is nicely summarised in the revised EESI (Environmental and Energy Study Institute) brief by Jeff Overton (Originally published in 2019 and revised in 2022).

    • @jimskirtt5717
      @jimskirtt5717 Před rokem

      @@CEUOTC
      I'll ask again. What's the principle GHG gas?

  • @2nd3rd1st
    @2nd3rd1st Před rokem +54

    Also ask yourself: is plastic "recycling" an excuse to produce more unnecessary plastic packaging? (95% of western plastic goes into landfills, often in Asia and Africa, or gets burned)
    All CC does is give an excuse to blow more CO2 into the air instead of reducing it at the source, just like bottles and bags made from recycled plastic are an excuse to sell more plastic wrapped produce and ever smaller shampoo bottles instead of reducing plastic packaging to begin with.

    • @YounesLayachi
      @YounesLayachi Před rokem +2

      plastic isn't actually recyclable. Plastic & oil companies design confusing logos that look similar to the recycling logo, to make consumers think otherwise

    • @alanmay7929
      @alanmay7929 Před rokem

      What if we can actually recycle them and make them cheaper than the new ones produced from oil! That’s the problem

    • @alanmay7929
      @alanmay7929 Před rokem +3

      @@YounesLayachi stop lying please!!!! Plastics are recyclable they just need proper sorting to facilitate it! Oil companies have nothing to say about that since those products are well labeled for different uses.

    • @YounesLayachi
      @YounesLayachi Před rokem +2

      @@alanmay7929 lol, i was just like you before, blind

    • @alanmay7929
      @alanmay7929 Před rokem

      @@YounesLayachi yeah that’s what she said!!!

  • @Jeddin
    @Jeddin Před rokem +14

    Yes. And so is hydrogen. Green hydrogen is a smoke screen to produce grey hydrogen.

    • @t1n4444
      @t1n4444 Před rokem

      Are you sure you understand what's going on here?
      If you can prove this assertion of yours then let's see your evidence.
      We'll wait.

    • @Jeddin
      @Jeddin Před rokem +6

      @@t1n4444 simple economics. In the USA grey hydrogen from steam methane reformation trades at $1.50-2 per kg. Green electrolyzed is $6-8 per kg and that is in locations with plenty of sun and wind. To transport it to less ideal locations is added cost as hydrogen is difficult to store and transport. The IRA legislation is attempting to correct the price disparity by offering a $3/kg incentive for zero carbon hydrogen. But at current prices that still won’t bring it to price parity. Without legislation requiring the use of green hydrogen the simple costs will drive purchasing of grey hydrogen. In addition there is a matter of supply. Grey hydrogen is 96% of all the hydrogen produced. So even if you wanted to purchase green hydrogen at 2-3x the cost you will find almost all the supply is grey.
      So is that enough facts for you to realize that fossil companies are pushing for a hydrogen economy because they know they can trumpet the benefits of green hydrogen but when it comes to reality for cost and supply you will continue coming to them for their fossil fuels to supply hydrogen.
      Not only that. But they will even benefit from that transition to hydrogen as decarbonizing methane to only use the hydrogen leads to a 40% loss of energy. So for the same energy needs you will have to use 40% more methane then if you had just used the natural gas for energy directly.

    • @jsgsmile
      @jsgsmile Před rokem

      @@Jeddin Yeah, but how is this news? There are several FullyCharged podcasts outlining exactly that.

    • @patreekotime4578
      @patreekotime4578 Před rokem

      @@jsgsmile Yes, but how is yours a helpful comment?

    • @YounesLayachi
      @YounesLayachi Před rokem

      totally. and blue hydrogen combines all the bads of grey hydrogen, with the bads of carbon capture

  • @stanislavjaracz
    @stanislavjaracz Před rokem

    Thank you for another great episode. Your conclusion is in complete sync with my rational. As a chemist: one unit of CO2 contains 27% carbon, the rest is oxygen. There is nowhere enough space under ground to take so much added mass. The carbon must stay underground, never be burnt. CCS = Oxygen Sequestration

  • @teotwawki_je
    @teotwawki_je Před rokem +6

    Love the bag of flour analogy.

  • @daveprice1608
    @daveprice1608 Před rokem

    Every politician from house of lords, MPs to District and Parish councillors should be sent a link to this episode on CZcams. Then make it a requirement by law for evry CEO and senior manger of a volume consumer or producer of fossil fuels to watch this along with an audience.of.primary school.children. Then take answers.on why we.are.destroying our planet . Probably the most cncise explanation on Carbon Capture.i have heard. Bloody brilliant please.keep it up

  • @user-lg1rk3by5u
    @user-lg1rk3by5u Před rokem +3

    Enjoyed this episode very informative and well-presented, it would be good to include in the descriptor the research links used. The time machine graphics were really good at putting things in perspective, well done.

  • @maxnewberryhtc
    @maxnewberryhtc Před rokem +7

    Great video! The time machine analagy was very informative 👌

  • @uncleskipsprairiejustice9367
    @uncleskipsprairiejustice9367 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Actually, in the 1980s, sulfur capture tech and low sulfur fuel reduced acid rain (resulting from SOx air pollution) measurably and probably saved a few lakes and rivers in the North American eastern seaboard. This was done in large part with pollution credits.

  • @bobvorwald9737
    @bobvorwald9737 Před rokem +3

    The time machine analogy was an excellent visual. Thank You

  • @colingenge9999
    @colingenge9999 Před rokem +3

    Problem solved if Fossil Fuel producers are forced to eliminate the CO2 created from their products. Seems fair to have them or their customers pay to clean up the mess they made.

  • @Scarbir
    @Scarbir Před rokem +1

    This makes me sad but it’s so, so good to know. Thank you so much!

  • @tuqe
    @tuqe Před rokem +3

    I would like Fully Charged to more address the fact that every kilowatt of energy used to drag a 5 seater electric car they promote (obviously better than petrol) is still a horrendous waste of energy compared to public transit. Not to mention the disastrous effects on the way we built our cities, fine particle pollution from tyres, excess road deaths and chronic underinvestment from govt's who see a Tesla the same way they see `blue` hydrogen

    • @jsgsmile
      @jsgsmile Před rokem +2

      If you listen to the podcast: they do it all the time!

    • @adrianthoroughgood1191
      @adrianthoroughgood1191 Před rokem

      There's a CZcams episode where Robert drives a battery powered train

    • @AlienLivesMatter
      @AlienLivesMatter Před rokem

      It's overpopulation for the sake of creditbubbles and corporate political donors causing the foundational issue.

  • @pjbell007
    @pjbell007 Před rokem +3

    Can you provide a reference for the 2019 study you mention at 6:36. The conclusions surprise me because you said it covers the intermittency, so I'd love to look at the underlying assumptions.

  • @gordonmackenzie4512
    @gordonmackenzie4512 Před rokem

    This has been a plan for Peterhead for over a decade. 52% of Uk gas comes ashore at Peterhead. However very little gas is burned there, only around 2% of Scotlands electricity generation. Scotland only needs 20% of this gas annually, the rest goes south. The plan was to pump CO2 back into the gas wells, back down pipes to the same place the gas came in the first place.

  • @VerilogTutor
    @VerilogTutor Před rokem +2

    Brilliently explained and scientifically accurate. I look forward to more episodes like this.

  • @xchopp
    @xchopp Před rokem +1

    I remember a few years ago the ClimeWorks site in Iceland was tooting its major breakthrough / accomplishment: geological sequestration of about the same emissions as -- wait for it -- 9,000 (nine thousand) cars! 9,000! If it doesn't scale, it's not really a solution, is it?

  • @grahamcastle8189
    @grahamcastle8189 Před rokem +4

    Terrific video, more like this please. We'll researched and presented as well as being balanced. Carbon capture - humbug. Simply stop burning things now.

  • @Smurphenstein
    @Smurphenstein Před rokem +4

    We have been building more and more efficient vehicles every year. Unfortunately we have squandered those efficiencies building larger and heavier vehicles.

    • @alanmay7929
      @alanmay7929 Před rokem

      Vehicles are just a tiny part of the equation! Imagine that we waste about 1/3 of global food production! That’s really terrible tbh!

  • @alansmith101
    @alansmith101 Před rokem +1

    Excellent program. I wish we could get it in front of everyone in the developed world!!!

  • @douglaskinloch6272
    @douglaskinloch6272 Před rokem

    CCS was supposed to be trialed in the North East of Scotland (at the only carbon-burning power station on the mainland). It was promised by the No campaign (Tory, Labour, Liberals) in the Scottish referendum. But they simply canned the idea.

  • @antcooper
    @antcooper Před rokem +1

    Very clearly explained, and some important food for thought. Wish more people would watch it. Also, we have that same chair 😊

  • @archthesheep
    @archthesheep Před rokem +5

    This is great but if you could post a link to the study in the description I think it would be sensible.

  • @colingenge9999
    @colingenge9999 Před rokem +2

    “Just Plant Trees” is a popular proposal that assumes it solves the problem BUT my calc showed that if we planted all the arable land on earth in trees it would not remove a significant fraction of the CO2 Fossil Fuels donate each year.
    Does anyone have an exact range for how much trees would reduce CO2 by?
    Much of the CO2 produced IS eliminated by natural means (dissolved by the oceans mostly) but these means are approaching their own tipping points.
    I use the figure of a 90% reduction in Fossil Fuel usage to get CO2 concentrations to level off but also believe that is too low because it does not take other emission sources into account.
    Some numbers to use in discussion would be of value.

    • @theairstig9164
      @theairstig9164 Před rokem +1

      CO2 to sucrose is about 8:1. CO2 to cellulose is less dense, about 4:1. So for every 1 T of CO2 you need 4T of cellulose fibre to store it. It’s approximate because “tree” isn’t exactly cellulose. Also if the tree isn’t used to displace something like concrete or plasterboard it needs to be buried before it rots or it will decompose and release methane. You’d be better off burying sugar cane, kelp or algae

  • @ProfessordevilL
    @ProfessordevilL Před rokem

    Another CZcams channel named Climate Town regularly covers this topic in depth with sources and citations. I encourage everyone to watch them. Him being funny as heck is just the cherry on top!
    He also shows that most of the percentages in real life are much lower than published and the published percentages are cherry-picked in a bad way.

  • @rogerwilliams7234
    @rogerwilliams7234 Před rokem +7

    Brilliant show - this should be compulsory viewing for all politicians and poluters alike! Wouldn't it be great if main-stream media were producing this quality of work?!

    • @jimthain8777
      @jimthain8777 Před rokem

      To be fair they do... sometimes. They do occasionally do deep dives into issues like this. Those kinds of programs also do deep dives into a whole host of other topics, so finding one on this topic, or similar topics can be difficult.

    • @alanmay7929
      @alanmay7929 Před rokem

      Nonsense!! Aren’t you a polluter too! Wtf!!! Don’t you eat the food that was planted and harvested by using oil byproducts!? What about your clothes! Shoes! Devices……!? What about the roads you use!?

    • @alanmay7929
      @alanmay7929 Před rokem

      Each year we all waste about 1/3 of the global food production imagine all the oil and energy wasted for that!?

    • @alanmay7929
      @alanmay7929 Před rokem

      Our roads, bridges, grid, infrastructure needs to expand and be maintained! We need tires, steel, aluminum….. your hideous tesla has no help in that situation not even solar or windfarms…..

  • @Na808Koa
    @Na808Koa Před rokem

    Fantastic and informative video, just the right length to include plenty of information yet short enough not to put off people from watching, well done writers and Helen.

    • @helenczerski5440
      @helenczerski5440 Před rokem +1

      I'm glad you liked it 🙂 I write all of my own episodes!

    • @Na808Koa
      @Na808Koa Před rokem

      @@helenczerski5440 Even better, great presentation and writing, thank you.

  • @75slaine
    @75slaine Před rokem +5

    This was great. Answered so many of the obvious questions one might think of when pondering carbon capture. Answered a lot for me anyway 👍

  • @RichardEricCollins
    @RichardEricCollins Před rokem +1

    The time machine analogy at the end was amazing. And very depressing. Excellent video. Thanks.

  • @dfishpool7052
    @dfishpool7052 Před rokem +2

    An excellent, professional presentation; thank you Helen - such a refreshing change from reviewing yet another unaffordable electric car video!!!

  • @MRRAWRAW1
    @MRRAWRAW1 Před rokem

    This is different, super cool hope to see more of it!

  • @keithwhite9978
    @keithwhite9978 Před rokem

    For this precise time them power plants are better underground where you could catch it far better instead of open atmosphere this means a sealed chamber and if you could turn the capture into hard substance then that would be better in building that are useful than storage in the ground else storage gets bigger in time that becomes a problem .

  • @anthonyjaccard3694
    @anthonyjaccard3694 Před rokem

    Thank you for at least mentioning CCU, although I would have liked it if you elaborated more on it. Big emitter companies don't want to implement CCS because they see it as a net loss in their revenue (and it is let's be honest). However, if they could make something profitable out of the CO2 they capture instead of stupidly putting it in the soil l, they would have way more incentives to do it. Would love to see a video about it in the future

  • @advvo9880
    @advvo9880 Před rokem +1

    Love these types of episodes

  • @yveslegh
    @yveslegh Před rokem +2

    Yes, we need to stop burning fossil fuels ! But so many countries can't afford to stop burning fossil fuels without the international community to help them financially!

  • @John.0z
    @John.0z Před rokem

    Thank you Helen. Yet another excellent presentation. 🙂

  • @mikemellor759
    @mikemellor759 Před rokem

    Hi Helen Really grateful for your overview 🙏

  • @FIGHTTHECABLE
    @FIGHTTHECABLE Před rokem +2

    The oil industry will always find ways to sell you oil.
    Climate compensation is just as ridiculous. Plant trees, while others just get cut down instead. What is the point?

    • @jimskirtt5717
      @jimskirtt5717 Před rokem

      Trees aren't part of the CO2 cycle. They aren't a fossil fuel. They absorb CO2 in your lifetime (most) then release it when they die, decay, or are burned. There's nothing wrong with burning trees apart from the smoke particles.

  • @mattcbinns
    @mattcbinns Před rokem

    Really helpful episode. Loved the Henry hoover too!

  • @peterchandler8505
    @peterchandler8505 Před rokem

    Interesting show as always from Fully Charged. Helen was quite softly saying this is probably a waste of time. To cover CCUS more accurately, with a more explicit (& earthy Aussie humour) assessment of where its value lies, Juice Media have covered the subject quite well with their video: "Honest Government Ad | Carbon Capture & Storage"

  • @steverichmond7142
    @steverichmond7142 Před rokem +2

    This is easy... Shell is a UK company. .... Nationalise Shell with no compensation to shareholders.... use the nationalised profits to gradually remove carbon and then close the company.

    • @jimskirtt5717
      @jimskirtt5717 Před rokem

      You do realise that you live in a capitalist society, right?

    • @steverichmond7142
      @steverichmond7142 Před rokem

      @@jimskirtt5717 I've worked for Shell UK and in Nigeria and if that's how to run a capitalist society I think we need a reset very urgently. Shell has caused more trouble and started more wars than any other entity in world history.

    • @jimskirtt5717
      @jimskirtt5717 Před rokem

      @@steverichmond7142
      My point was that you cannot do what you said! To take a share-held company from the market with no compensation would collapse the economy. A nation's credit rating would be trashed.

    • @steverichmond7142
      @steverichmond7142 Před rokem

      @@jimskirtt5717 Why would it collapse the economy? The UK's credit rating would not be trashed. It would seriously damage the City of London which can only be a good thing. It would also set an example to other oil companies.

  • @jerryjoynson
    @jerryjoynson Před rokem

    The depiction of the scale of the problem is excellent (see the video at 14 mins), and yet also really quite depressing. The oil & gas industry, for example, has been injecting CO2 into subsurface reservoirs for ~50 years. With all that learning and knowhow, they still only inject about 20 million t CO2/year, or turning the clock back only 4.5 hours/year 😭

  • @RyanSargent
    @RyanSargent Před rokem

    The CDR facility in Iceland, Orca, cost $10-15 mil to build. Removing 4000 tn of CO2, equivalent to 2 WHOLE petrol cars (average km’s per year with passenger car, gasoline: 9,994 km, source CBS, Dutch National Statistics).

    • @RyanSargent
      @RyanSargent Před rokem

      Scaled to 36,000 tn, a whopping 18 cars taken off the road. Well done CDR [slow clap]

    • @701983
      @701983 Před rokem

      I suppose, you mixed up tons and kilograms.
      A petrol car will produce around 2 tons (2000 kg) of carbon dioxide per year.
      However, it's not even a drop in the bucket.

  • @IanKath
    @IanKath Před rokem +1

    Thank-you Helen and team. This is the point, not just about reduction and mitigation but reversal and renewal. After MUCH consideration, assessing my carbon footprint and surprised how high it still was (5.2 tonnes/year) even after car-free cycling life and knowing reducing CO2 is the goal, I looked into a CO2 removal systems which works.
    The only one I could see with a chance is ClimeWorks. It's not perfect and I've been waiting for over a year to see if someone can fault it but it seems to be valid so far.
    Expensive, Yes! Small scale,Yes! But it's using geothermal energy to power the system and geologically storing the CO2 so it can't escape in the future, therefore it ticks the main boxes for me. It's been over a year I've paid €50/mth to reduce my CO2 to 4.6 tonnes/year. I wish I could do more but I live in AU so I'm in a system.
    The main reason I have for supporting ClimeWorks is to see them scale and bring the cost down by one or two orders of magnitude. Meantime I'm continuing to tweak my lifestyle to not produce CO2 where I can. I may have taken my last flight!

  • @MrNickMid
    @MrNickMid Před rokem +2

    Really good analysis and description of the issues with the varieties of Carbon Capture. I wish Helen was making more of these types of programmes for Fully Charged. Talking about car interiors is getting a bit boring. Especially when measures of efficiency and weight do not often figure in the vehicle testing.

  • @gordonmackenzie4512
    @gordonmackenzie4512 Před rokem

    In the UK, 80% of all new tree planting is In Scotland. It amounts to around 22 million trees per year.

  • @papysebpapy
    @papysebpapy Před rokem

    Very powerfull explaination this "time machine". 👍

  • @willrogers3702
    @willrogers3702 Před rokem +2

    Carbon capture is the plan for most hydrogen production in the U.K.
    It’s also one of the reasons I was looking to leave the gas industry.
    Carbon off-setting is the other big scandal too. Pretending that we can just plant a few trees to offset all the CO2 being produced.

  • @jamesvandamme7786
    @jamesvandamme7786 Před rokem

    I've sequestered carbon by burning waste tree trimmings into biochar and digging it into the garden. It adsorbs fertilizer and water, improves the soil, and lasts hundreds of years. The yield is about 50%, but what escapes is stuff I've grown myself, so it's carbon negative.
    Growing and burning trees for fuel is just carbon neutral, although you hide the CO2 for a few years.

  • @isaiah123456wp7
    @isaiah123456wp7 Před rokem +10

    Overall, Carbon capture seems like a complete waste of time and resources.

    • @lorenzoventura7701
      @lorenzoventura7701 Před rokem

      As a fossil worker, moving to that sector would be a kind of dream indeed

    • @philiptaylor7902
      @philiptaylor7902 Před rokem +1

      It’s worse than that, it’s a green washing smokescreen so that fossil fuel companies can continue “business as usual”

    • @melange78
      @melange78 Před rokem

      No. It is absolutely required. We just need to scale it up much faster. OTW we will be too late to save the worlds oceans from acidification from CO2.

  • @thepiratecats801
    @thepiratecats801 Před rokem

    Excellent report.

  • @DrMatthewhannah
    @DrMatthewhannah Před rokem

    Another great video from Helen. More please

  • @calmeilles
    @calmeilles Před rokem

    The plant in Iceland is the most efficient direct from air carbon capture system built to date. If it were scaled up to balance just our current emissions the necessary land would be the size of the State of Texas.

  • @chiranthanmr
    @chiranthanmr Před rokem +1

    I watched the series "The Rig" yesterday night. This is like Deja Wu for me.

  • @theunknownunknowns5168
    @theunknownunknowns5168 Před rokem +10

    Good content. I'm so over endless car reviews. Thanks Helen.
    I do think you under estimate what the natural environment can do to capture carbon, for a start humans don't need to plant the trees as evidenced by Hinewai Reserve, Banks Peninsula, Aotearoa. Just give the land the opportunity to reestablish and the natural processes will "plant the tress". Applies to soils, wetlands and marine environments too. This approach is vastly more scalable than gambling on CCS.

    • @colingenge9999
      @colingenge9999 Před rokem +1

      We have hundreds of millions of years of captured carbon in coal. Burning it in two centuries will be a disaster that would not be offset by planting trees on every square foot of the earth. We would need to be planting a couple hundred million years worth at once to have a significant impact on the rate at which we are burning fossil fuels.

    • @dykam
      @dykam Před rokem +1

      Maybe. But e.g. one of the consequences of oceans absorbing CO2 is that it causes the ocean to acidify. Natural processes should merely be a buffer, and not the thing to gamble on, as it's not without consequence. And quite clearly it doesn't catch up quick enough, or otherwise there wouldn't be a problem at all.

    • @colingenge9999
      @colingenge9999 Před rokem

      @@dykam oceans, absorbing carbon dioxide and acidifying are indeed a huge risk. The problem being that, even if we drastically reduce our carbon emissions, the atmospheric levels of carbon dioxide will still remain high with the oceans, taking and more and more. I’m sure the client scientists know what levels of carbon dioxide we need to go to to prevent this, but this is seldom mentioned, which makes me think that we just have to accept the fact that the oceans will be shot in short order due to a certification.

    • @dykam
      @dykam Před rokem

      @@colingenge9999 There's been recent meta research towards climate tipping points, which I think included ocean acidification. It's not often in the media because it would make the discussion even more complex, but it's definitely in the view of climate scienticm.

    • @theunknownunknowns5168
      @theunknownunknowns5168 Před rokem

      @@dykam Yeah, I should have said increased bio diversity, like limestone is locked up carbon from little sea critters if I remember correctly. Biological systems have done a great job at stabilising the climate in the past... for free and no human effort required. Let's give the biological systems a chance to do that again, nature dutifully working in our favour with zero effort from us just seems obvious doesn't it? We can have our technology on standby for extreme events.

  • @molinkie
    @molinkie Před rokem

    I love the sarcasm in your banner image!

  • @Sidewinder1009oli
    @Sidewinder1009oli Před rokem

    our family have been paying to offset about twice our estimated carbon footprint for 3 years using a company called Ecologi, it doesn't us much and we've worked hard to reduce our footprint too. They say we've removed 99.77tonnes of CO2 with our subscription and have 1,479 trees planted for us.
    I really hope it's making a difference and it would be great if others who have the means can do so too, and it's not just trees but projects and wind farms etc in developing countries.

    • @jimskirtt5717
      @jimskirtt5717 Před rokem

      You are completely wasting your time, energy, and money, and you haven't a clue as to why, have you?

  • @hollyandtheev6519
    @hollyandtheev6519 Před rokem

    Absolutely brilliant video.

  • @chrisb508
    @chrisb508 Před rokem

    Out here in West Texas, there are a lot of emissions related to gas flaring at the oil wells. This has always struck me as extremely wasteful since the gas that is burned doesn't even result in energy production. I'd like to see that gas collected and used more productively; however, oil companies probably don't do it because it's cost prohibitive.
    Unfortunately, I think carbon capture is all just smoke and mirrors. The petrochemical companies just want to kick the can down the road. I think that the effort should not be on carbon capture, but to increase wind, solar and hydro projects to avoid the carbon being burned in the first place.

  • @comfortgreen2865
    @comfortgreen2865 Před 5 měsíci

    Question . how much co2 is captured ? DO they charge by tons? I would like to use it for (Insulation materials) Mag Oxide base.

  • @chillmeister
    @chillmeister Před rokem

    I know we’re not supposed to have favourites, but Helen’s episodes are mine. Can we have a Helen playlist on the channel please?

  • @ProvencalG
    @ProvencalG Před rokem

    A lot of interesting informations.
    So we need to use carbon capture technologies at the sources while transitioning to renewables.
    Also I'm wondering: We can end our use of petrol for energy, because we have other viable methods to get energy. But can we end it for creating plastics? I mean, plastic is a huge part of our lives, we can reduce it, recycle it (up to a point) but not really eliminate it completely.

  • @keithwilson1554
    @keithwilson1554 Před rokem +1

    Yes to the title. No need Carbon capture if you just got to clean energy. And they have had 30 years to Transition.....Times Up!.

  • @Raymaster7482
    @Raymaster7482 Před rokem +2

    Great video! You're absolutely right... and yes, there is a big fear that at least some of the CO2 that is pumped into the ground comes back up somewhere else.

    • @5353Jumper
      @5353Jumper Před rokem

      Firstly let me state CCS particularly on petroleum production and energy generation projects is pure stupidity.
      But to your point there is very little possibility that underground sequestered CO2 will return to the atmosphere, other than natural emissions that happen on their own. If the natural gas was not escaping, then neither will CO2 pumped into a reservoir to push out the natural gas and oil.
      But don't worry, there are so many other arguments against CCS we do not need that one.
      Best argument is likely that it takes so much energy to do CCS that it produces more carbon than it sequesters.
      If I said "let's use a huge amount of energy to capture a small mount of emissions from our energy production." Would that make sense to anyone with basic math skills? Not unless they are a petroleum company executive or the politicians they bribe to fund these stupid projects.

  • @stevezimmerman5644
    @stevezimmerman5644 Před rokem

    I would love a show investigating how we are planning to clean up industrial processes like smelting metals, manufacturing composite materials, glass manufacture or silicon fabrication for example. If we can achieve clean electricity can we do it or will we have to settle for some level of industrial pollution in order to be able to build a technically advanced society?

  • @coniow
    @coniow Před rokem +1

    Chinese proverb: The best time to plant a tree is 20 years ago.
    'Aint THAT the truth!

  • @jhunt5578
    @jhunt5578 Před rokem +1

    It does frustrate me when people ask "where would we get the land for growing trees?" Animal agriculture uses up an area of land the size of Africa whilst providing no extra calories compared to if everyone were Vegan. Perhaps cutting down on, or eliminating animal foods where possible would be the elephant in the room solution.

    • @waywardgeologist2520
      @waywardgeologist2520 Před rokem

      Good luck with that. Most people don’t want to be vegan and enjoy eating meat.

    • @jhunt5578
      @jhunt5578 Před rokem

      @Wayward Geologist "We are quite literally, gambling with the future of our planet - for the sake of cheeseburgers" Peter Singer

    • @YounesLayachi
      @YounesLayachi Před rokem

      animal food is fine, the west's excessive abuse is not. Eating beef 3 times a day every day is not healthy

  • @davidelliott5843
    @davidelliott5843 Před rokem +1

    I would be grateful if Fully Charged Show could interview Moltex Energy Ltd. They are a nuclear power company (OMG) but they are building a reactor that literally burns nuclear waste. They make 20x more power than the original plants AND the resulting waste has a 1/2 life of 30 years. That’s easily managed. The 30,000 years of just leaving the fuel in storage most certainly isn’t easy.

  • @Muppetkeeper
    @Muppetkeeper Před rokem

    Excellent content as usual.

  • @marktaylor9751
    @marktaylor9751 Před rokem

    This is a good description of the different types of carbon capture. I do find it somewhat annoying that the same channel that constantly highlights the trend lines of cost reductions for renewables and batteries doesn't do that here. In fact they take the same approach that many EV detractors take; use issues and costs today and simply say it'll never work, never replace the incumbent technology. But innovation happens when companies invest, when solutions start to be deployed, when competition drives companies to improve their economics. Wrights Law helps demonstrate the effect of this. We actually need these companies to do what they are doing. And we simply shouldn't assume that there will be no improvement in the cost/efficiency of these sorts of solutions over the coming years.

  • @Alex-cw3rz
    @Alex-cw3rz Před rokem +1

    Brilliant Video

  • @patrickfavier4310
    @patrickfavier4310 Před rokem +1

    40% of all worldwide shipping involves transport of fossil fuel, oil rigs and their restocking an personell movement and all other offshore oil and gas movements. Stop burning oil and gas, and you almost half shipping emissions instantly.

  • @timw1971
    @timw1971 Před rokem

    Great video!

  • @colintwyning9614
    @colintwyning9614 Před rokem

    Great Info.

  • @thearab59
    @thearab59 Před rokem +5

    Helen is too polite, and too politic, to say it, but it's a worthless con, forget it, and get on with stopping burning stuff. Once we've done that, we can come back to this, maybe.

  • @MiKiii123
    @MiKiii123 Před rokem

    Great informative video but would greatly appreciate if you could cite your sources in the description below 🙏

  • @3rdrock
    @3rdrock Před rokem

    Absolutely correct. The easiest and cheapest way to mitigate atmospheric CO2 is to not digit up in the first place.

  • @alaneasthope2357
    @alaneasthope2357 Před rokem

    Forget trees, fast growing grasses (sea grass and bamboo as an example) are far more efficient at removing CO2 and locking it away.

  • @chiguy_
    @chiguy_ Před rokem

    the problem is, the statement we need to make it fast.. no we need to make it right. I work in renewables and have seen what happens when you make things fast to make the projects come on line... Tooo many things break due to lack of proper production. then comes the shipping issues too fast leads to damaged equipment so things have to get made twice. I really feel it is the REDUCTION of usage that everyone needs to do with the slow injection of newer tech and then further the reduction of usage then you can increase the amount of CCS/CCR ideas. I would love to see anything and everything come to be solar on homes, only use ICE when needed, and then get the battery production not using rare metals, and have a good recycling place.
    I know I said ICE in that, mainly due to it being something to use sparingly. not a daily, but on the weekend at race tracks, for long haul trip for those enthusiasts that like the sound created and the ability to make something with a family member. currently trying to make an electric car or race car with the family is way to expensive and hard to do .. lets use or reuse what is taking up a lot of space with cars currently to keep those enthusiasts going further and slowly adopting when the batteries are better and motors are more plentiful and then motorcycles also can do the same...
    a slow mythotical plan is always the best so the correct data set can get made to where scaling will be a no brainer, more effective, efficient, and costs will be a LOT less...
    anyway I look forward to seeing more CCR and CCS happening and seeing how the infrastructure companies can keep up when the oil is not able to be used to make a lot of the products that go in them. cheers.

  • @ferkeap
    @ferkeap Před rokem

    We won't be able to go without.
    We do need CCS for industry,
    As else it fossil carbon they will use.
    To clean something up that's already expelled we use DCR, wich we will get better at all the time.
    And yes we need to scale up nuclear and other sustainable sources constantly!

  • @jimthain8777
    @jimthain8777 Před rokem

    Carbon Capture technologies have one big flaw that I can see. Human air pollution creates more than just Carbon Dioxide, it also creates Carbon Monoxide, and other pollutants. So while it is good to reduce the Carbon Dioxide, what do we do about those other pollutants?

  • @bofor3948
    @bofor3948 Před rokem +1

    In the Uk Solar and wind will not provide 100% of our energy needs. We don't have enough sunhine hours/land available and the wind is variable or zero. If we are to provide our future needs we need other sources of energy. Nuclear? waste problems and fear of a major accident. The UK is an Island surrounded by predictable tidal seas. Much dearer than wind turbines to construct and maintain, but surely the answer together with solar,wind and energy storage. Also you say the aim is to stop burning fossil fuels? The aim should be to be able to use them with zero impact. Batteries, solar panels and turbines are improving all the time whilst equipment which uses electricity is becoming more efficient. Current methods of cleaning combustion products or storing the waste are not up to snuff yet. There has been no insentive for the oil companies to invest to become a viable clean alternative in the future. The growing production of clean electricity and its use should change that. It would seem insane to me to reduce your future energy options if REAL improvement can be made.
    Also on the subject of seas and oceans, finding a way to undo the PH changes (caused by soaking up CO2), as well as cleaning plastics and rubbish would greatly help with the abilty of these bodies in reducing the CO2 in the atmosphere and improve the environment for aquatic life.

  • @rca168
    @rca168 Před rokem

    Please stop burning oil as we need it for manufacturing everything, especially chemistry and composites

  • @dennislaughton1676
    @dennislaughton1676 Před rokem +1

    All life on earth is carbon based. Most if not all plants will respond in yield with increases of atmospheric CO2. Most commercial greenhouses add CO2 by 2-3 times ambient with resulting yield increases. As CO2 levels have increased the greening of the earth has also increased.

  • @drpepper3k
    @drpepper3k Před rokem

    Excellent video. Even if it made me feel everything is futile!!

  • @oiyou5870
    @oiyou5870 Před rokem +1

    So once you capture all the carbon, what are you planning to do with it?? We can't keep sticking our waste underground, we need and must learn to or invented technology to not only capture but to recycle in better products or uses.

  • @ARepublicIfYouCanKeepIt

    From perusing the comments, it seems that many people are of the belief that captured CO2 that's sequestered underground is a sort of "gas bubble" that will inevitably leak back into the atmosphere.
    Limited by time, the topic of sequestration was abbreviated. In the case of subsurface storage, CO2 is stored in suitable geologic formations where the CO2 is stored in either saline aquifers or depleted hydrocarbon reservoirs. Storage can also occur in other formations where it mineralizes in short order.
    Other types of sequestration also exist. For example, CO2 can be permanently sequestered in concrete, the production of which is a prolific emissions source.
    I've long advocated a "silver buckshot" approach to climate change mitigation. Carbon sequestration is part of the mix of solutions that, taken in total, will help us to avoid the worst consequences of global climate change.
    As Helen points out, we have to stop adding global greenhouse gases to the atmosphere. Otherwise, all these mitigation technologies are like shoveling sand sand against the tide. We must decarbonize as quickly as possible. Easier said than done for sure. But we must.

  • @BobQuigley
    @BobQuigley Před rokem

    As always thanks for the enlightenment! An angle I've not found discussed so far might make a good FCS episode. This might apply to America mainly. In the '80s America's 70 million baby boomers were strong armed into putting retirement funds into the stock market. Pensions were eliminated or cut back to a handful of companies. In their place an ecosystem of interconnected money manipulators arose. Almost all money for retirement went into stocks. Simultaneously US financial wizard of the day declared corporations have one and only one responsibility. Perpetual growth of profits for the investors. Today we 70 million boomers are well into retirement. We are addicted to endless growth of our investments in order that our retirement is financially viable. Fossil Fuel companies understand this addiction! Even where an individual has been able to divest from fossil fuels his corporate investments require ever more fossil fuel to grow their profits. All this resulting in a self reinforcing disaster. Thanks again for your work

  • @lingondraken
    @lingondraken Před rokem

    Underrated video, I am sorry the algorithm screwed with this video.
    Still, CCS is confusing as a subject since it is so broad and so wide. Not to mention the fossil industry trying to push their own take on CCS scam as a viable option.

  • @zoltronr6
    @zoltronr6 Před rokem

    Amazing episode. Time machines are hard.

  • @micheals1992
    @micheals1992 Před rokem

    Is it bad that I came up with a theoretical scenerio where the Oil in the ground was put there by us in a never ending cycle of climate catastrophy. We discover the oil, we burn all the oil, we realise the damaged to the climate, we capture the carbon, pump it underground, we was too late, most people die from the hostile climate. Hundreds of thousands of years pass, the carbon we put in the ground starts turning back into oil. The survivors start to progress back up the technological ladder and then discover the oil and repeat the process.
    I suppose it's pretty much the same as nuclear weapons, chances are we would have found evidence if any of this had really happened but it's the same kind of self destruction loop.

  • @KermitFrogThe
    @KermitFrogThe Před rokem

    I expect this to be a dumb question andam asking it because I like learning and hope someone will help me here.
    With so many uses for carbon why isn't CCU more popular?
    I understand if the demand is not high enough etc. but surely there are ways we can use it to replace things we are currently mining etc. Carbon body panels on cars rather than metal etc.

    • @jimskirtt5717
      @jimskirtt5717 Před rokem

      Because they actually do know that it would be madness! We need a high level of CO2 - for crop yields and forestation, although there actually is no optimum level of CO2. We need it higher than it currently (420ppm) is - at 150ppm all plant life dies, and so do we. No more warming can come from CO2 as the absorption bands where warming is produced is taken up by water vapour. So even when CO2 doubles to 800ppm, which it will, there won't be any more warming. Why do you think that there's hardly been any warming at all in the past 20 years despite a massive release of CO2 and methane? Think about it. All the computer models you may see use 'clear sky' on runs of future climate...but we don't have clear skies, we have clouds! Water vapour is 95% of all greenhouse gases. It's all a big con, but it will slowly unravel in the coming years.

    • @KermitFrogThe
      @KermitFrogThe Před rokem

      @@jimskirtt5717 Sorry Jim there is plenty of evidence for the overall global average temperature rising. The challenge is isolating which are the causes, because there are so many possibilities.
      Warmer climate doesn't equal clear skies. Some of the most tropical places on earth are rain forest, the name gives away that they aren't covered by clear skies all the time.
      The computer models don't show pictures of blue skies, the people putting pictures alongside the stories do that. Computer models for climate aren't creating pictures, they are creating data about temperature and predicting it's impact.

    • @jimskirtt5717
      @jimskirtt5717 Před rokem

      @@KermitFrogThe
      Tony, I think you're misunderstanding on a number of fronts...
      I never said the temperature hasn't risen - of course it has! What the scientific data is telling us is that there can't be anymore warming got from any more CO2.
      I didn't (either!) say 'blue skies'! 'Clear skies' refers to the computer models which fail to take water vapour into account. Do you want me to send you a video which explains it?
      Lastly, you cannot create data about temperature. 'Data' is the raw recordings.

    • @KermitFrogThe
      @KermitFrogThe Před rokem

      @@jimskirtt5717 Thank you for the clarifications.
      CO2 is a greenhouse gas, not the worst of them, in the same way as a 22 cal bullet is not as powerful as a 50, but it can still kill.
      Computer models about future temperatures aren't working on raw recordings, because we aren't able to get these for events which haven't happened. What we use is predictive analytics, predicting the future using the past. Never a perfect process, and having done it on many things, not climate, for many years, the part that shocks us most is when the variance is 0, because it is so rare.
      If the only climate models are looking at skies without the current content, I would hope these have been improved on when they try minimising variance. I don't know, as I said, not an area I hav worked in, but it is standard continuous improvement.
      I would be lying if I said I had never missed anything obvious when creating predictive models during my career. You feel very dumb when having it pointed out, but sometimes the most obvious is exactly where you don't look.
      I would say if there are videos showing this was the case, the people generating that data will since have altered it.
      I have seen models on shows trying to figure out the future of climate that have covered distance from the sun, us leaving the most recent ice age, and other things. This shows there are groups really trying to include everything for best understanding. If they have all missed the environmental make up, inclding water and even organic life that never touches the ground, I would be surprised. If the government procided figures missed it, I wouldn't. Especially considering how many governments are busy trying to deny there is a problem.