Dubai Telegraph - Heavy industry turns to carbon capture to clean up its act

EUR -
AED 4.31146
AFN 77.552815
ALL 96.490006
AMD 447.387397
ANG 2.1015
AOA 1076.545647
ARS 1686.460724
AUD 1.760602
AWG 2.116111
AZN 1.99315
BAM 1.95662
BBD 2.360179
BDT 143.199982
BGN 1.956637
BHD 0.442544
BIF 3463.35069
BMD 1.173987
BND 1.515741
BOB 8.097392
BRL 6.345873
BSD 1.171786
BTN 105.771304
BWP 16.540858
BYN 3.43814
BYR 23010.14023
BZD 2.356777
CAD 1.616715
CDF 2623.86079
CHF 0.932964
CLF 0.02736
CLP 1073.317806
CNY 8.286057
CNH 8.278702
COP 4464.965093
CRC 583.546915
CUC 1.173987
CUP 31.110649
CVE 110.311206
CZK 24.201973
DJF 208.666515
DKK 7.469115
DOP 75.041752
DZD 152.174529
EGP 55.805107
ERN 17.609801
ETB 182.47371
FJD 2.66706
FKP 0.874416
GBP 0.876262
GEL 3.169235
GGP 0.874416
GHS 13.452635
GIP 0.874416
GMD 85.700954
GNF 10192.269224
GTQ 8.974759
GYD 245.122674
HKD 9.137837
HNL 30.851054
HRK 7.535468
HTG 153.462974
HUF 382.616951
IDR 19524.690979
ILS 3.759816
IMP 0.874416
INR 106.058551
IQD 1535.042982
IRR 49436.581934
ISK 148.204435
JEP 0.874416
JMD 187.737838
JOD 0.832368
JPY 182.800889
KES 151.11573
KGS 102.665441
KHR 4690.944912
KMF 493.074524
KPW 1056.583646
KRW 1729.94575
KWD 0.360027
KYD 0.976509
KZT 610.165579
LAK 25415.645822
LBP 104936.154484
LKR 362.38179
LRD 206.826633
LSL 19.845112
LTL 3.466477
LVL 0.710133
LYD 6.364639
MAD 10.779015
MDL 19.956359
MGA 5197.154791
MKD 61.561122
MMK 2465.687013
MNT 4164.573128
MOP 9.392234
MRU 46.451655
MUR 53.909635
MVR 18.090815
MWK 2031.942463
MXN 21.162074
MYR 4.804542
MZN 75.011046
NAD 19.845112
NGN 1701.552826
NIO 43.118061
NOK 11.81033
NPR 169.234608
NZD 2.018902
OMR 0.451397
PAB 1.171791
PEN 3.949454
PGK 4.972061
PHP 69.293982
PKR 329.571844
PLN 4.22215
PYG 8008.320328
QAR 4.270789
RON 5.091231
RSD 117.392861
RUB 93.000534
RWF 1705.607162
SAR 4.405546
SBD 9.662606
SCR 16.594891
SDG 706.148212
SEK 10.862781
SGD 1.515406
SHP 0.880794
SLE 28.293557
SLL 24617.912895
SOS 668.477157
SRD 45.301212
STD 24299.155382
STN 24.510162
SVC 10.253295
SYP 12982.392397
SZL 19.839226
THB 37.168443
TJS 10.804126
TMT 4.108954
TND 3.435839
TOP 2.826678
TRY 50.121365
TTD 7.952331
TWD 36.617932
TZS 2887.993286
UAH 49.462107
UGX 4166.74532
USD 1.173987
UYU 46.139326
UZS 14085.900144
VES 310.795223
VND 30885.243326
VUV 142.623146
WST 3.268316
XAF 656.229079
XAG 0.018394
XAU 0.000274
XCD 3.172758
XCG 2.111885
XDR 0.816138
XOF 656.229079
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.84908
ZAR 19.778131
ZMK 10567.290561
ZMW 26.864138
ZWL 378.023253
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    81.17

    0%

  • BCC

    -0.7500

    76.26

    -0.98%

  • CMSD

    0.1200

    23.4

    +0.51%

  • CMSC

    0.1300

    23.43

    +0.55%

  • RELX

    0.2000

    40.28

    +0.5%

  • GSK

    0.4700

    48.88

    +0.96%

  • AZN

    -1.2200

    90.29

    -1.35%

  • RIO

    0.5000

    76.74

    +0.65%

  • BCE

    0.2100

    23.4

    +0.9%

  • NGG

    0.0500

    74.69

    +0.07%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    13.72

    0%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1000

    14.64

    -0.68%

  • VOD

    -0.0200

    12.54

    -0.16%

  • BTI

    -0.3900

    58.37

    -0.67%

  • BP

    -0.3500

    35.53

    -0.99%

Heavy industry turns to carbon capture to clean up its act
Heavy industry turns to carbon capture to clean up its act / Photo: DENIS CHARLET - AFP

Heavy industry turns to carbon capture to clean up its act

For decades heavy industry around Dunkirk in northern France has belched out millions of tonnes of climate-heating gases.

Text size:

Now the area close to the Belgium border -- one of Europe's industrial powerhouses -- wants to catch its pollution before it escapes.

With factories turning out steel, cement and fertilisers, the Dunkirk area produces more carbon dioxide (CO2) than any other industrial region in France.

In Rety, about an hour's drive from the port city, a never-ending stream of lorries brings limestone to a plant run by Belgian giant Lhoist, the world leader in quicklime production.

The limestone is heated to more than 1,000 degrees Celsius (1,830 degrees Fahrenheit) for 24 hours in kilns 50 metres (165 feet) tall to produce the calcium oxide needed by the steel and paper pulp industries.

"We have the capacity to produce 700,000 tonnes of quicklime a year, so we emit about an equivalent amount of CO2," said Yves Boraccino, the manager of the plant in Rety, where nearly every surface is coated in white dust from a nearby quarry.

- Freezing the CO2 -

Two-thirds of that CO2 is belched out of the plant's chimneys during the limestone calcination process.

The remainder comes from the fossil fuels used to fire up the kilns.

In 2025, the site hopes to start equipping itself with a new mini-factory to capture the CO2.

Carbon capture and storage will be pushed hard by industry at the UN COP28 climate talks in November as a way to slow the rise in the planet's average temperature to around 1.5 degrees Celsius.

But there are still big questions over technologies that are in their infancy, and the world does not have much time.

The International Energy Agency (IEA) says that even if it works, carbon capture would have to be scaled up 100,000-fold by 2050 to hit net-zero targets.

Lhoist has turned to industrial gas giant Air Liquide for help to capture carbon emissions from its Rety plant.

They have developed a technology called CryoCap which will capture the gases and cool them down to -50C (-58F) when CO2 turns to liquid, said Nicolas Droin of Air Liquide.

The CO2 will then be separated off and piped to a terminal in Dunkirk that will hold 1.5 million tonnes of the gas when it opens in 2028.

- 'Industrial revolution' -

The Lhoist site in Rety is not the only one in the area aiming to clean up its act.

A few kilometres away, a cement plant owned by Eqiom is also planning to sequester its carbon pollution and send it to Dunkirk.

"From there, it could be taken by ship to deep geological storage sites in the North Sea," Boraccino said.

The whole project -- estimated to cost 530 million euros ($560 million), much of it with European Union funds -- could, in the medium term, store up to four million tonnes of CO2 per year, according to Air Liquide and its partner, Dunkerque LNG.

That would enable steel giant ArcelorMittal, which is testing a different carbon capture procedure, to connect up to the terminal at some point in the future.

Patrice Vergriete, head of the urban Dunkirk authority, said the region is transforming itself through this low-carbon "industrial revolution".

Carbon capture projects almost tripled globally in 2021 and have almost doubled again since then, according to the IEA.

But in a report in July it also warned against relying on technologies that are "expensive and unproven at scale". So far, it said, only five percent of capture projects have got the green light from investors.

Instead the IEA insisted that the best solution is to reduce the amount of CO2 being generated in the first place.

H.Sasidharan--DT