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The ICM Forum in Pau last week was full of insightful discussions on how Europe can drive decarbonisation through technologies such as Carbon Capture Usage & Storage (CCUS). For energy-intensive industries like lime industry, CCUS is essential —not only for decarbonisation but also to safeguard competitiveness and jobs across Europe.
Key takeaways:
Thank you to CCS Europe and Zero Emission Platform for hosting a breakfast event to discuss what is needed to make CCS happen. Moderated by ZEP’s Eadbhard Pernot, with contributions from industry, NGOs, and policymakers, the panel emphasised the importance of raising political awareness, involving financial institutions to de-risk investments, and ensuring strong national strategies from Member States.
On Friday afternoon, group wrapped up the final panel and conclusions of the conference and headed to Teréga and Total Energies for the site visits.
Thank you to Teréga for an insightful panel discussing the benefits of synergising expertise to create a CCUS ecosystem that can be replicated throughout Europe.
Thank you to TotalEnergies for interactive session exploring the technical challenges of the CCUS decarbonisation chain in 2024, based on the experience of the their CO₂ capture/transport/storage pilot project at Rousse.
It is imperative that we have a vision for CCS in the EU. To ensure meaningful progress in CCS deployment, fast-tracking CO₂ transport and storage standards are critical to overcoming regional infrastructure gaps requires a communication toolkit and community engagement guidelines. Establishing an EU-wide CCS industrial alliance is critial for knowledge sharing and infrastructure development, as CCS plays a pivotal role in achieving decarbonisation goals for hard-to-abate industries such as lime.
Moving forward, EuLA is encouraged by the Commission’s commitment to present a new industrial strategy on its 101st days, and hopes to see the priorities highlighted at the ICM forum reflected in the strategy.