R&D needs and goals
Continued research into carbon capture
technologies could lead to better optimised
systems with reduced investment costs and energy
intensities.
The technical and innovation challenges for CO
2
utilisation focus on increasing the efficiency of
chemical processes and innovation for new CO
2
utilisation pathways. Intensified research, better
catalysts and better process designs will bring
higher efficiency levels, lower costs and lower
material consumption or waste production.
New and innovative ways of using CO
2
and the use
of non-purified CO
2
may make more applications
possible. Challenges for mineralisation are the
reduction of processing costs and the widening of
the range of (waste) materials that can be used as
input (Sandalow et al., 2017). Research should be
carried out through collaborative projects across
different industrial sectors, engaging emitters,
transformers (e.g. chemical industry) and final
users.
Transportation is the crucial link between CO
2
emissions sources and storage sites. In most
countries, there is insufficient attention paid to
technology and infrastructure needs. Pipeline
transportation presents different regulatory, access
and developmental challenges in different regions.
The magnitude, complexity and geographic spread
for integrated CCS transport pipelines require
region-specific assessments.
Further research is also needed to better understand
storage availability on a global level. Cement kilns
are usually located near large limestone quarries,
which may not be close to suitable CO
2
storage
sites. It is also likely that CCS clusters will be
influenced by their proximity to much larger CO
2
sources such as coal-fired power plants.
Spotlight: Alternative
binding materials
for cements
During calcination in the kiln for the production
of clinker, CO
2
is released from raw materials (see
Table 3). This is referred to as process CO
2
emissions,
and accounts for about two-thirds of the total direct
CO
2
emissions from cement production. Clinker
contains 40-80% alite on a mass basis (ECRA and
CSI, 2017), resulting in typically around 0.52 t of
process CO
2
released per tonne of clinker produced.
Reducing the clinker to cement ratio is a carbon
mitigation strategy, which together with carbon
capture, storage and utilisation, reduces the impact
of process CO
2
emissions in the cement sector. A
global clinker to cement ratio of 0.60 is realised
by 2050 in the 2DS, through the increased use of
cement constituents instead of clinker and greater
penetration of blended cements. This translates into
a reduction of the process CO
2
intensity of cement
by 30% over that period.
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