But the greatest
challenge for carbon capture and storage is not technical.
Not exact matches
Chu highlighted the department's biggest new research initiative, a set of eight new Energy Innovation Hubs, each one focused on a different energy - related
challenge: solar electricity; fuels produced directly from sunlight; batteries and other kinds of energy storage;
carbon capture and storage; new technologies
for the electrical grid; efficient buildings; extreme materials; and modeling and simulation.
While ensuring the widespread deployment of
carbon capture / storage technology does represent a significant
challenge, it is more feasible than other policy options being offered by those who simply don't see any role
for coal in our energy future.
The potential
for carbon capture and storage in China One - third of coal - fired power plants in China meet a broad range of criteria
for CCS retrofit, representing a significant opportunity
for meeting climate goals and setting a
challenge for government and industry 17 January 2017
TreeHugger recently did give Rudd a Best of Green award, but I wonder if Rudd hasn't made a deal with the devil here: CCS Can Be Part of the Solution... Rudd rightly gets that, in his words, «
Carbon capture and storage is not the only answer to the climate change
challenge» and that it can certainly play a part in the transition to a low -
carbon future, but I just don't buy into Rudd's «cold, hard reality» that coal will remain (or at least has to remain) the globe's major source of energy
for many years to come.