Inside Clean Energy: How Should We Account for Emerging Technologies in the Push for Net-Zero?

The plan relies on technologies that already exist on a large scale, like solar panels and batteries.

But it’s far from clear how much we can rely on either technology, because of high costs and questions about whether they will ever work on a large enough scale.

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What that means for policy, she said, is that the government needs to create incentives to develop technologies and have environmental regulations that encourage the use of low-carbon and zero-carbon technologies.

The government may be on the cusp of a substantial increase in incentives for CCS and DAC systems. The $1 trillion-plus spending bill being considered in Congress includes an expansion of tax incentives under section 45q of the U.S.

Greg Nemet of the University of Wisconsin told me he sees a major opportunity in developing direct air capture, which can include a variety of carbon-removal technologies.

The plant cost $10 million to $15 million to build, which isn’t a lot compared to the cost of power plants, but also is only removing a tiny bit of carbon dioxide, the equivalent of the annual emissions of fewer than 1,000 cars.

While Nemet sees vast potential in direct air capture, he sees less upside in carbon capture, which is a process of removing carbon from the exhaust of a power plant or a factory, and then storing the carbon or finding some other use for it.

After years of development, Petra Nova went online in 2016 and then closed in 2020 following mechanical and financial problems. It cost about $1 billion, including at least $167 million from the U.S.

Despite the reasons for concern about carbon capture, Nemet thinks there is a need for continued development of the technology for the economy to get to net-zero.

I’m focusing on these two technologies, but the U.S.

Meanwhile, natural gas power is $60 per megawatt-hour, up from $59 in the prior year but down from $83 in 2009.

Running a grid with high levels of wind and solar is a challenge, requiring careful planning and the availability of energy storage and other resources to fill in gaps.

Taking a Closer Look at Climeworks’ Direct Air Capture Plant: The company that is pioneering direct air capture has been operating its plant in Iceland since September, showing what this technology looks like in real-world conditions.

A clear majority of voters approved Question 1 on Tuesday, a referendum that would ban construction of the New England Energy Connect project, as Tux Turkel reports for the Portland Press Herald.

Xcel Energy Sets Goal for Carbon Neutrality of Gas Utility: Three years after Xcel Energy set a goal of getting to net-zero emissions in its electricity generation by 2050, the company says it wants to reach a similar target for its natural gas system.

Illinois Solar Companies Optimistic as Incentives Return: After a difficult year, Illinois solar businesses are excited to see that state incentives are returning after the governor signed a sweeping clean energy bill in September, according to Kari Lydersen of Energy News Network.

He came to ICN in 2018 after a nine-year tenure at The Columbus Dispatch, where he covered the business of energy.

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