UK scientists promise more CCS cooperation with China at Shanghai Expo

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British scientists at the Shanghai Expo site have called on the scientific world to help China reduce carbon emissions through developing carbon capture and storage (CCS) technologies.

The appeal was made by founders of the UK National Center for Carbon Capture and Storage (NCCCS), who announced the launch of the research facility into CCS technology at the London ZEDpavilion on Monday.

Heads of the NCCCS said the Shanghai Expo was chosen as the launchpad for the UK-based institute to highlight the significance of helping China combat the threat posed by greenhouse gases through more international cooperation in developing climate change technology.

"It wasn't a hard decision for us to come here," said Professor Mike Stephenson, director of the NCCCS, in his speech at the Expo.

"To put it bluntly, China is going to need to burn coal in quite staggering quantities if it is to sustain its current economic growth during the decades ahead," said Stephenson, also head of science (energy) at the British Geological Survey, the UK's preeminent center for earth science information and expertise founded in 1835.

In the long run, to maintain steady economic growth without irreparably damaging the environment would require China to use technology designed to arrest the rising carbon dioxide levels, Stephenson said.

"We hope to establish firm links with Chinese academic institutions, government organizations and leading industry figures in CCS," said Professor Mercedes Maroto-Valer, the NCCCS's chief scientific officer.

Maroto-Valer, also director of the University of Nottingham's Center for Innovation in CCS, said, "If the fight against climate change is to be won, then China, more so than any nation, will have to harness all the available potential of CCS technology," said Maroto-Valer.

"We believe that on every level -- environmental, economic and scientific -- it is in the interests of the rest of the world to assist in any way it can," said Maroto-Valer.

British scientists are already supporting a three-stage project, funded by the European Union and the UK's Department for Energy and Climate Change, to run a full-scale CCS demonstration in China by 2020, said Stephenson.

"The NCCCS has strong links with China thanks to previous collaborative research projects between the British Geological Survey and the Institute of Geology and Geophysics of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), the China University of Petroleum in Beijing, and the China University of Petroleum in Shandong," said Stephenson.

The findings of these collaborative projects, which include COACH (Cooperation Action within CCS China-EU) and NZEC (Near Zero Emissions from Coal), had highlighted the potential of CCS in China, said Stephenson.

Both projects looked at the potential for geological storage of carbon dioxide in parts of northeast China where the coal power generation capacity was increasing at an amazing rate, said Stephenson.

China's saline aquifers offer the potential for very large amounts of storage -- between 70 and 700 gigatonnes over one particular region to the north of Beijing, Stephenson said.

Jiang Xinmin, researcher at the Energy and Research Institute of the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), expected CCS technology to play a bigger role in reducing China's carbon emissions, not least because the role of coal in China's energy consumption.

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