2015 Carbon Management Technology Conference
Techno-Economic Merit Analysis of Conversion of Captured CO2 to Value-Added Products
There are very limited uses of captured CO2 other than for enhanced oil recovery (EOR) which currently has in excess of 126 projects some as high as 2 Mtonne/yr capacity. The Global Carbon Capture and Sequestration (CCS) Insititute provides a list of current and future storage sites and also highlights the challenges and costs of coordinating the development of a CO2 transportation infrastructure. Few major industrial CO2 generation sources (e.g. refineries, ammonia/urea manufacturing facilities, fossil power generation plants etc.) are located close to these storage sites. Hence, substantial CO2 transportation costs would be incurred after capture. Additionally, legal title to non-EOR geological storage portends costly and protracted litigation and has led to the abandonment of several CO2 sequestration projects. As a result, different technologies for conversion of captured CO2 to value-added products are being actively pursued. Some of these products are: a) inorganic carbonates; b) bio-fixation; c) solar-powered photosynthesis; d) synthesis of specialty chemicals, such as alkyl-carbonates; e) bulk industrial chemicals, such as methanol; f) liquid fuels; and g) solid carbon products. During this presentation, a comparative techno-economic merit analysis for conversion of captured CO2 to value-added products is discussed. The three major criteria in this merit analysis include: a) net CO2 sequestration based on C-Footprint analysis; b) global market potential of the product manufactured from CO2; and c) integration with industrial source of captured CO2.