Carnegie Mellon Team Leads National Project Recommending Regulations for Safe Capture and Sequestration of Carbon Dioxide
July 23, 2009
Contact: Chriss Swaney
Carnegie Mellon University
412.268.5776
PITTSBURGH—Carbon
capture and sequestration (CCS) technology, which captures carbon dioxide from
power plants and safely disposes of it deep underground, will not meet its full
potential in the United States without new federal regulations that create a
uniform regulatory environment.
This
is the conclusion of a set of four policy briefs just released by the CSSReg
project led by M. Granger Morgan, head of Carnegie Mellon University's
Department of Engineering and Public Policy.
"At
the moment, there is a patchwork of different rules across the U.S. and a great
deal of legal uncertainty," Morgan said. "We need a clear way for CCS
projects to obtain the right to inject carbon dioxide into appropriate
geological formations and a strategy for safely addressing long-term
stewardship once an injection project ends."
Morgan
and his colleagues believe that without a safe and cost-effective way to use
CCS, as part of a broader strategy for CO2 emissions control, there
is no way the country will be able to achieve the reductions in future CO2
emissions that Congress and the Obama administration are now proposing.
The
policy briefs, available from http://www.CCSReg.org,
describe changes to federal law and agency rules needed to overcome regulatory
and legal barriers to large-scale deployment of carbon sequestration.
The
CCSReg project is supported by a $1.85-million grant from the New York-based
Doris Duke Charitable Foundation (DDCF) with additional support from the
National Science Foundation (NSF). In addition to investigators at Carnegie
Mellon, the project team involves experts at the University of Minnesota, the
Vermont Law School and the Washington, D.C.- based law firm of Van Ness
Feldman.
While
Morgan and his colleagues argue that a general framework for
"performance-based regulation" should be established today, they
believe the U.S. must build and gain experience with several commercial-scale
facilities before finalizing many of the regulatory details. For this reason,
developing an "adaptive two-stage" approach to regulation is a key
part of their proposal.
Sean
T. McCoy, the CCSReg project manager, said the four policy briefs address the
needed framework for comprehensive regulation of CCS; the regulatory framework
for pipelines transporting CO2 for geologic sequestration; governing
access to and use of pore space for geologic sequestration; and managing
liability and long-term stewardship for geological sequestration. Specific
recommendations include:
-
Amend the Safe Drinking Water Act to direct Underground Injection Control (UIC) program regulators to create adaptive, performance-based rules for geologic sequestration, and to include mechanisms to resolve conflicts between multiple environmental objectives.
-
Expand the federal UIC program to address conflicting uses of pore space during permitting; creating new federal legislation that would limit the trespass liability of a sequestration project developer operating pursuant to a valid UIC permit.
-
Modify the Federal Land Policy Management Act to specifically authorize the use of federal lands for geologic sequestration.Create a Federal Geologic Sequestration Board (FGSB) that would oversee long-term stewardship of adequately closed sequestration projects.
-
Create a revolving fund, based upon risk-based assessment on geologic sequestration projects during their operating life, which will finance the FGSB and any remediation or compensation necessary during long-term stewardship.
-
Create a stopgap federal indemnity program for the stewardship phase of "first-mover" geologic sequestration projects.
-
Develop an "opt-in" federal regulatory regime providing the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission authority to grant or deny applications for federal siting permits for new CO2 pipelines built for the purposes of geologic sequestration.