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Journal of Australian Energy Producers
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Carbon capture and storage—deelopments in Australia

Stuart Barrymore A and Ann-Maree Mathison A
+ Author Affiliations
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Freehills

The APPEA Journal 49(1) 65-78 https://doi.org/10.1071/AJ08006
Published: 2009

Abstract

Legal and non-legal developments in the carbon capture and storage (CCS) arena continue to gain momentum in Australia. On 22 November 2008 the Offshore Petroleum Amendment (Greenhouse Gas Storage) Act 2008 (Cth) (GGS Amendments) came into force. The GGS Amendments follow the amendment in February 2007 of the Convention on the Prevention of Marine Pollution by Dumping of Wastes and Other Matter 1972 and 1996 Protocol Thereto (London Protocol) which allows the storage of carbon dioxide under the seabed.

The GGS Amendments amend the Offshore Petroleum Act 2006 (Cth) (OPA), which has now been renamed the Offshore Petroleum and Greenhouse Gas Storage Act 2006 (Cth) (Act), to establish a system of offshore titles that authorises the transportation, injection and storage of greenhouse gas (GHG) substances in geological formations under the seabed and manage the inevitable interaction with the offshore petroleum industry. In addition, the States of Queensland and Victoria have now enacted onshore CCS legislation.

In September 2008, the Federal Government announced $100 million in funding for an Australian Global Carbon Capture and Storage Institute (AGCCSI), which will be an international hub for co-ordinating public and private sector funding of CCS research projects and will provide international policy and management oversight. The AGCCSI was formally launched on 16 April 2009. The goal of the AGCCSI is to deliver at least 20 commercial scale CCS plants around the world by 2020. There are numerous examples in Australia and internationally of CCS pilot projects underway with the goal of deploying CCS on a commercial scale. The Callide Oxyfuel Project in Central Queensland that began construction recently will retrofit an existing coal fired power station with a CCS facility, with plans for the oxyfuel boiler to be operational in the Callide A power plant by 2011.

Stuart Barrymore is the practice leader of the corporate group at Freehills in Perth, with a particular focus in the energy and resources sector. Stuart acts for most of the major oil and gas producers operating in Western Australia and internationally. His areas of expertise include major project acquisition and divestment, project structuring, development and financing (particularly LNG project development); the negotiation of state agreements; unitisation; gas sale and transportation; carbon storage; commodity purchase and sale contracts; and advice on the applicable legislative regimes (such as the Offshore Petroleum Act, mineral legislation, PSC’s, Timor Gap Zone of cooperation etc). He is also regularly selected as a leading practitioner in independent industry and professional guides. Stuart holds an Honours Degree from the University of Western Australia and a Masters Degree from Cambridge University.

Stuart.Barrymore@freehills.com

Ann-Maree Mathison is a solicitor in the Environment group at Freehills in Perth. Ann-Maree has advised oil and gas companies on all aspects of Commonwealth and State carbon capture and storage (CCS) legislation, including the implications of the legislation for petroleum operators and the environmental approvals needed to conduct CCS exploration. Ann-Maree holds an Honours Degree from the University of Western Australia.

Ann-Maree.Mathison@freehills.com