全球和区域市场新闻安全和 ESG

伍德麦肯兹:到 2034 年,全球 CCUS 投资需要 1960 亿美元

根据伍德麦肯兹最近发布的报告,到 2034 年,全球碳捕获能力将达到 4.4 亿吨/年,碳储存能力将达到 6.64 亿吨/年,总投资额需要 1960 亿美元。

根据《CUS:10年市场预测》报告,全球近一半的投资与二氧化碳捕获有关,其余530亿美元来自运输,430亿美元来自封存。约70%的投资将在整个价值链上投向北美和欧洲。

“与目前的行业水平相比,这是一个巨大的提升。政府资金在推动第一波 CCUS 投资方面发挥着关键作用,”Wood Mackenzie 亚太区 CCUS 负责人 Hetal Gandhi 表示。“我们看到各国政府为 CCUS 提供资本支出补助、运营支出补贴、税收优惠和差价合约。虽然没有一种单一机制被主要使用,而且每个国家都设计了新的方法来激励投资,但五个主要国家已直接投入近 800 亿美元用于 CCUS。”

美国以 50% 的资助率领先,其次是英国 (33%) 和加拿大 (10%)。

CCUS 研究分析师 Stephanie Chiang 表示:“虽然我们看到美国等国家提供了强有力的支持,但亚太地区的政府支持却落后了。澳大利亚、马来西亚和印度尼西亚已经宣布了一些优惠,但这些优惠远远低于他们的投资需求。澳大利亚 4000 万美元的直接激励措施还不到未来 10 年所需投资的 1%。”

尽管预计项目数量将大幅增加,但伍德麦肯兹并不认为碳捕获的供应能够满足需求。到 2034 年,工业界将需要高达 6.4 亿吨/年的碳捕获能力,因为它们希望实现脱碳,但预计投入运营的项目比这一数字少了约 2 亿吨/年。

Gandhi 表示:“在已宣布并预计将进入开发流程的项目中,71% 位于北美和欧洲。美国通胀削减法案 (IRA)、英国商业模式、加拿大投资税收抵免和荷兰 SDE++ 计划等政府激励措施正在推动项目走向最终投资决策 (FID)。我们还预计,由于最近宣布的欧盟工业碳管理战略,欧洲项目将进一步得到推动。”

报告还预计,到 2034 年,全球封存容量将达到 6.64 亿吨/年,其中近 80% 的规划项目将在 2030 年之前启动。二氧化碳封存项目的速度将超过排放国的吸收量,到 2034 年,全球捕获-封存缺口将超过 2 亿吨/年。

高级研究分析师 Fauzi Said 表示:“由于存储容量比分散的捕获容量更加集中,基于中心的存储生态系统将得到发展,尤其是在欧洲和亚太地区。”

二氧化碳跨境运输政策和处理责任风险的双边协议仍然是中期需要关注的关键领域。

原文链接/DrillingContractor
Global and Regional MarketsNewsSafety and ESG

Wood Mackenzie: Global CCUS investment needs $196 billion through 2034

By 2034, global carbon capture capacity will reach 440 mtpa and storage capacity will reach 664 mtpa, requiring $196 billion in total investment, according to a recent report from Wood Mackenzie.

According to the report “CCUS: 10-year market forecast”, nearly half of the investment globally is associated with CO2 capture, with the remaining $53 billion from transport and $43 billion from storage. About 70% of the investment will be in North America and Europe across the value chain.

“This is a huge ramp-up from where the industry is today. Government funding plays a critical role in driving the first wave of CCUS investments,” said Hetal Gandhi, the APAC CCUS lead with Wood Mackenzie. “We see governments offering capex grants, opex subsidies, tax incentives and contracts for differences for CCUS. While no single mechanism has been used predominantly and each country devises novel methods to incentivize investments, nearly $80 billion is directly committed to CCUS across five key countries.”

The U.S. leads in funding at 50%, followed by the United Kingdom at 33% and Canada at 10%.

“While we are seeing strong support in countries like the U.S., government support in APAC lags behind,” said Stephanie Chiang, research analyst at CCUS. “Australia, Malaysia and Indonesia have announced some benefits, but they are substantially lower as compared to their investment needs. Australia’s direct incentives at US$40 million is less than 1% of the investment needed over the next 10 years.”

Despite the large, forecasted increase in projects, Wood Mackenzie does not expect supply of carbon capture to meet demand. Industries will need up to 640 mtpa of carbon capture capacity by 2034 as they look to decarbonize, but the projects expected to come into operation fall around 200 mtpa short of that.

“Of the projects already announced and expected to go ahead in the development pipeline, 71% are in North America and in Europe,” said Gandhi. “Government incentives such as the US Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), UK business models, Canada’s Investment Tax Credit and the Netherlands SDE++ scheme are moving projects towards final investment decision (FID). We also expect a further boost to European projects due to the recently announced EU Industrial Carbon Management Strategy.”

The report also sizes the global storage capacity to reach 664 mtpa in 2034, with almost 80% of the planned pipeline starting up by 2030. CO2 storage projects will outpace emitter uptake, leaving a global capture-storage gap of more than 200 mtpa by 2034.

“With storage capacities more concentrated than the spread-out capture capacities, hub-based storage ecosystems will evolve especially in Europe and APAC,” said Fauzi Said, senior research analyst.

Policies for transportation of CO2 across borders and bilateral agreements handling of liability risk remain key areas to watch out in the medium term.