Rapid development and
adoption of carbon capture technology will require close collaboration between leading research universities like MIT and the fossil fuel industry.
Not exact matches
Adoption of clean coal technologies like
carbon capture and storage also will be a heavy lift for the utility sector, since they can significantly drive up production costs.
In 2005, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change published a report on
carbon dioxide
capture and storage that was enthusiastic about the possibilities
of such technology, but downbeat on prospects for
adoption given the cost.
One
of the technologies the scenarios took as necessary was rapid global
adoption of systems that
capture and store
carbon dioxide from power plants — none
of which have been tested at anything remotely close to a scale the atmosphere would notice.
In addition to rapidly increasing China's
adoption of non-fossil power sources such as renewables and nuclear, to mitigate long - lived CO2 emissions,
carbon capture and sequestration (CCS) must be applied to both new and existing China plants, both coal and gas.
In the Huffington Post, Tom Zeller, Jr., has filed an expanded version
of an earlier clear - eyed examination
of the impediments to wide
adoption of technologies for
capturing carbon dioxide from the air and stashing it underground.
He outlined several decisions taken during the Beijing talks, including the
adoption of stronger vehicle fuel efficiency standards and work on
carbon capture, utilization and storage projects.