Concurrent 24. Oral Presentation for: The Northern Territory low-emissions carbon capture, utilisation and storage hub development – the collaborative business case development
Andrew Stuart Ross A *A CSIRO, Australian Resources Research Centre, 26 Dick Perry Avenue, Kensington, WA 6151, Australia.
The APPEA Journal 63 - https://doi.org/10.1071/AJ22383
Published: 2 June 2023
Abstract
Presented on Wednesday 17 May: Session 24
The Commonwealth Science and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO), Northern Territory Government, and Industry are working collaboratively on developing the business case for a carbon capture, utilisation and storage (CCUS) hub based on the Middle Arm of Darwin Harbour. This business case is following the development vision developed by government and industry which incorporates, Northern Territory industrial development goals and those of the gas companies to chart a course for rapid decarbonisation of the energy and industrial sectors of the Northern Territory. The business case is focussed on three key elements; Part 1 – macro-economics, emissions, markets and best practice CCUS hub examples; Part 2 – CCUS hub technical definition and technical risk reduction studies; and Part 3 – Hub economic models and execution plans. These activities aim to understand the viability of the development of a 25 million ton CO2 storage and utilisation hub by 2040. Work on the business case is well underway and this paper will provide a progress update, with particular focus on the activities associated with part 1 of the business case.
To access the Oral Presentation click the link on the right. To read the full paper click here
Keywords: Beetaloo, Bonaparte, CCUS, Darwin, emissions, energy transition, hydrogen, low-emissions hub, middle arm, middle arm sustainable development precinct, net zero, Northern Territory, Northern Territory low-emission hub.
Andrew Ross is a Principal Senior Research Scientist and Group Leader at CSIRO. He leads multidisciplinary research projects on basin geology, marine geology and marine monitoring. Recently he has been focussed technology commercialisation, CO2 storage and monitoring, and development of CCUS and hydrogen hubs. Dr Ross joined CSIRO in 2004 and has qualifications in marine biology, oceanography and petroleum geoscience. |