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  5. Innovative regulatory and financial parameters for advancing carbon capture and storage technologies
 
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Innovative regulatory and financial parameters for advancing carbon capture and storage technologies
File(s)
Makuch - Fordham CCS Law.pdf (534.71 KB)
Published version
Author(s)
Makuch, Zen
Georgieva, Slavina
Oraee-Mirzamani, Behdeen
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
In the post-industrial age, the realisation of inherent technical innovation potentials requires that stakeholders develop flexible, cooperation-based frameworks if first mover opportunities and advantages are to be realised. In the Paris Agreement5 implementation context, carbon capture and storage technologies have emerged as a complementary adjunct to climate change mitigation and a diversified energy mix. However, developing the technology is not without technical and financial risks. The challenge for key stakeholders, primarily (but not exclusively) government and industry counterparts is to develop mutually reinforcing strategies, regulations and policies for testing and commercialising Carbon Capture and Storage (“CCS”)technologies and networks, as that will be determinative of their fate. In the Paris Agreement implementation period, the UK, for example, has indicated a commitment to bold greenhouse gas reductions(57% by 2030),and investment in CCS, as part of the ambitious emissions reductions targets set forth by the European Union, the deployment of which is meant to count for 20% of the greenhouse gas emissions captured by 2030. This has subsequently resulted in plans for several pilot CCS plants on UK soil. The up-scaling of CCS to the demonstration level, however, is dependent not only on the presence of sufficient interest and funding –an ongoing issue in the UK both pre-and post-Brexit-but also on the existence of appropriate regulatory conditions and options for additional private financing by industrial stakeholders. Furthermore, it is important to note that the up-scaling of projects from pilot to demonstration, and further on to a commercial-scale, is materializing in the context of a global financial crisis and a dip in investment trust in high-risk ventures. The development of CCS projects in individual states, is not only influenced by national regulatory regimes, policy developments, and fluctuations in financial markets, but is also dependent upon the legislative signals given from supra-national bodies and binding international agreements. In Europe, the CCS Directive’s approach to long term environmental and related financial risk has led to the current state of regulatory and financial uncertainty, thereby, giving rise to potentially uninsurable liabilities which dis-incentivise private sector investment in CCS technology. This is in contrast with legislation in competing states including the United States, Norway, Canada and Australia. There is every indication that the paramount issue standing in the way of CCS is uncertainty over regulated financial security requirements for site operators and the nature and attribution of liability arising from leakage. This uncertainty could be addressed by a combination of insurance for storage sites and a robust permitting process, which would minimize the likelihood of leakage to virtually zero. There are, therefore, excellent reasons for national and international law and policymakers to seriously consider a more careful and tailored legislative and policy mix, so that regulatory oversight is in balance with innovative financial, insurance and liability mechanisms. In addition to exploring this subject matter, the article offers a number of recommendations for flexible, stakeholder partner-based advancement of CCS technology potentials in climate change and related environmental regulation.
Date Issued
2020-10-01
Date Acceptance
2020-08-18
Citation
Fordham Environmental Law Review, 2020, 32 (1), pp.1-16
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/85272
URL
https://ir.lawnet.fordham.edu/elr/vol32/iss1/1/
ISSN
1079-6657
Publisher
FLASH: The Fordham Law Archive of Scholarship and History
Start Page
1
End Page
16
Journal / Book Title
Fordham Environmental Law Review
Volume
32
Issue
1
Copyright Statement
© 2020 FLASH: The Fordham Law Archive of Scholarship and History.
Sponsor
Scottish Power Foundation
Identifier
https://ir.lawnet.fordham.edu/elr/vol32/iss1/1/
Grant Number
4700192622
Subjects
1801 Law
Publication Status
Published
Date Publish Online
2020-10-01
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