Occidental 的 Stratos DAC 项目有望于 2025 年启动

西方石油公司位于德克萨斯州的直接空气捕获商业规模设施旨在每年捕获多达 50 万公吨的二氧化碳

西方石油公司高管 8 月 8 日表示,该公司的直接空气捕获 (DAC) 项目 Stratos 预计将于 2025 年夏季启动。

该商业规模设施位于德克萨斯州埃克托县一块约 65 英亩的土地上,设计投入运营后每年可捕获多达 50 万公吨的二氧化碳。

“我们现在已经不再使用散装填充了。我的意思是,安装大型管道等,然后逐一完成系统。所以,我们现在处于这个阶段,以便能够按照正确的顺序进行调试,”西方石油公司高级副总裁兼国际石油和天然气业务总裁肯尼斯·狄龙 (Kenneth Dillon) 表示。“本月我们将开始通电,这意味着我们可以开始启动控制室并测试整个工厂的所有仪表。所以,目前进展非常顺利。”

该设施由西方石油公司的 1PointFive 采用Carbon Engineering的 DAC 技术开发,预计将成为同类设施中规模最大的设施之一。

据国际能源署称,该设施是全球正在开发的 130 多个大型 DAC 设施之一。尽管 DAC 技术是成本较高的碳捕获和储存方法,但它有望在全球降低排放的努力中发挥作用。目前,全球只有 27 个 DAC 工厂投入使用;然而,数量正在增长,包括在美国,税收优惠正在激发人们的兴趣。

税收抵免

碳封存税收抵免,即 45Q,对于封存的合格碳氧化物,抵免额为每吨 17 美元,但对于与提高石油采收率 (EOR) 相关的储存,抵免额将跃升至每吨 60 美元,对于专用地质储存,对于具有碳利用的 DAC,抵免额将跃升至每吨 130 美元,对于带有碳储存的直接空气捕获,抵免额将高达每吨 180 美元。

二氧化碳去除信用额度允许公司资助专注于去除碳的项目,这对 Stratos 的发展起到了重要作用。这些信用额度也称为碳补偿,允许所有者排放一定量的二氧化碳其他温室气体 (GHG)。每个信用额度允许排放一吨二氧化碳或其他温室气体。

7 月份,1PointFive表示已达成协议,将在六年内向科技巨头微软出售 50 万公吨 Stratos DAC 二氧化碳去除 (CDR) 信用额。

西方石油公司首席执行官维姬·霍卢布 (Vicki Hollub) 在 8 月 8 日的公司财报电话会议上表示:“该协议是迄今为止最大的单笔直接空气捕获 CDR 信用额度购买,凸显了碳工程技术作为帮助组织实现净零目标的解决方案越来越受到认可。”

她随后补充说,Stratos 已经引起了世界各地公司的极大兴趣。

“我们相信,随着我们不断证明它,随着我们不断改进它,它将比今天人们所认识到的更有价值,”她说。

西方石油公司美国陆上资源和碳管理业务总裁理查德·杰克逊表示,该公司正在关注 CDR 销售情况,并对该市场的前景持乐观态度。不过,该公司尚未对 CDR 目标设定任何具体参数,尽管这将是 DAC 项目 FID 标准的主要组成部分。

降低成本

西方石油公司的高管表示,施工期间采用的创新技术有望降低成本。DAC 工艺采用液体吸附剂。工艺中使用的部分材料(如氢氧化钾和分解的氧化钙颗粒)可以重复使用。

“我们看到了性能改进和成本降低的巨大潜力,我们正在研究如何尽快将这些经验融入其中,”Dillon 说道。“像Technip Energies这样的公司也专注于如何降低设备成本,这是公司高层推动的。因此,我们得到了有远见的供应商的大力支持,他们看好 DAC 的长期未来。”

1PointFive 还与 King Ranch、Carbon Engineering 和 Worley 合作在南德克萨斯州开发南德克萨斯州 DAC 枢纽。DAC 设施获得了美国能源部的资助。

“Ranch 确实是我们在二叠纪之后的下一个开发目标。它确实具有我们过去谈论过的很多规模优势,无论是地下还是工厂的平衡,”杰克逊说。“考虑关键的电力投入、无排放电力投入、水或其他优势,”他说,并补充说地下工程工作仍在继续。

计划是将 Oxy 的第一个 DAC 项目 Stratos 的经验教训运用到其他项目中。

杰克逊说:“金牧场开发项目令人兴奋的地方在于,它每年可生产 3000 万吨货物。因此,你可以获得巨大的规模经济,我们认为这确实有助于降低成本,从而促进研发改进。”


有关的

Occidental 的 1PointFive 同意向微软出售碳信用额

西方石油公司和巴特尔牵头的 DAC 项目获得美国政府高达 12 亿美元的资助

原文链接/HartEnergy

Occidental’s Stratos DAC Project on Track for 2025 Startup

Occidental Petroleum’s direct air capture commercial-scale facility in Texas is designed to capture up to 500,000 metric tons of CO2 annually.

Occidental Petroleum’s direct air capture (DAC) project, Stratos, is on track to start up in summer 2025, company executives said Aug. 8.

Located on about a 65-acre site in Texas’ Ector County, the commercial-scale facility is designed to capture up to 500,000 metric tons of CO2 annually when it becomes fully operational.

“We’re now moving away from bulk fill. By that I mean putting in the large piping … et cetera into completing the systems one by one. So, we’re at that stage now so that we can commission in the right sequence,” said Kenneth Dillon, senior vice president and president of international oil and gas operations for Occidental. “We get power live this month, which then means we can start getting the control room up and running and testing all of the instrumentation throughout the plant. So, [it’s] going really well at the moment.”

The facility, being developed by Occidental Petroleum’s 1PointFive with Carbon Engineering’s DAC technology, is expected to be one of the largest facilities of its kind.

The facility is among the 130 or so large-scale DAC facilities being developed in the world, according to the International Energy Agency. Despite being on the more expensive side of carbon capture and storage methods, DAC technologies are expected to play a role in global efforts to lower emissions. Currently, only 27 DAC plants have been commissioned worldwide; however, numbers are growing—including in the U.S. where tax incentives are spurring interest.

Tax credits

The carbon sequestration tax credit, known as 45Q, is $17/metric ton for sequestered qualified carbon oxide, but the value jumps to $60 per ton for storage associated with enhanced oil recovery (EOR), $85 per ton for dedicated geologic storage, $130 per ton for DAC with carbon utilization and up to $180 per ton for direct air capture with carbon storage.

CO2 removal credits, which allow companies to fund projects focused on removing carbon, have been instrumental in advancing Stratos. The credits, also called carbon offsets, allow owners to emit a certain amount of CO2 or another greenhouse gas (GHG). Each credit permits one ton of CO2, or other GHG, to be emitted.

In July, 1PointFive said it entered a deal to sell 500,000 metric tons (mt) of Stratos DAC carbon dioxide removal (CDR) credits to tech giant Microsoft over six years.

“The agreement is the largest single purchase of direct air capture CDR credits to date and highlights the increasing recognition of Carbon Engineering technology as a solution to help organizations achieve their net-zero goals,” Occidental CEO Vicki Hollub said on the company’s earnings call Aug. 8.

She later added that Stratos has generated lots of interest from companies around the world.

“We believe that as we prove it up, as we make it better, that it’s going to be much more valuable than what people realize today,” she said.

Richard Jackson, operations president of Occidental’s U.S. onshore resources and carbon management, said the company is monitoring CDR sales and remains optimistic on the outlook for that market. However, it hasn’t set any specific parameters on CDR targets though it will be a major component of FID criteria for DAC projects.

Cost down

Innovative techniques seen during construction are providing line of sight to cost down, Occidental executives said. The DAC process utilizes a liquid sorbent. Some of the materials used in the process—such as potassium hydroxide and decomposed calcium oxide pellets—can be reused.

“We are seeing really great potential for performance improvements and cost down improvements, and we’re looking at how to incorporate these learnings as quickly as possible,” Dillon said. “Companies like Technip Energies are also focused on how to achieve cost down for their equipment, and that’s driven from the top of the company. So, we’re getting great support from our visionary vendors who have bought into long-term DAC future.”

1PointFive is also developing the South Texas DAC hub in partnership with King Ranch, Carbon Engineering and Worley in South Texas. The DAC facility landed funding from the U.S. Department of Energy.

“King Ranch is really what we’ve targeted for the next kind of development beyond the Permian. And it really has a lot of scale advantages that we’ve talked about in the past, both with the subsurface and as we think about it at the balance of plant,” Jackson said. “Think about key power inputs, emission-free power inputs, water or other advantages,” he said, adding subsurface engineering work continues.

Plans are to incorporate learnings from Stratos, Oxy’s first DAC project, to other projects.

“The exciting part about that King Ranch development [is that it’s] a 30 million ton per year hub,” Jackson said. “And so, you get these tremendous economies of scale that we really think add to the R&D improvements in terms of a cost down.”


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