The US Department of Energy‘s Office of Fossil Energy and Carbon Management has selected five projects that will receive a total of $101 million in federal funding for advancing CO2 capture, removal, and conversion technologies. The selected projects will target industrial facilities, including cement plants, and power generation operations. The initiative aligns with efforts to lower CO₂ emissions, create new jobs, and enhance US energy security.
Advancing Carbon Management Technologies
Brad Crabtree, Assistant Secretary of Fossil Energy and Carbon Management, said, “Carbon management technologies such as carbon capture can significantly reduce emissions from fossil energy use and key industrial processes, like cement production.”
He added, “By investing in test centers, we are helping reduce barriers to commercial scale deployment of carbon capture, conversion, and removal technologies that will ultimately help reduce pollution and create jobs.”
The projects establish test centers meant to evaluate how effective and economical the technologies aimed at capturing, removal, and CO2 conversion happen to be. The facilities intended to test as well as to scale carbon management using various feedstocks and real operational conditions. They are designed to test and scale carbon management technologies using diverse feedstocks and real-world operating conditions.
Selected Projects
The DOE funding will support five key initiatives aimed at advancing carbon management technologies. The University of Illinois will design a test center focused on carbon capture, removal, and conversion in the cement industry.
Holcim US plans to establish a Cement Carbon Management Innovation Center at its Hagerstown facility in Maryland, exploring feasibility and partnerships. Southern Company Services will continue operating the National Carbon Capture Center, testing CO₂ technologies under real-world power plant conditions.
The University of North Dakota Energy & Environmental Research Center will improve its test center to cost-efficiently evaluate carbon management technologies. The University of Wyoming will expand its test center to explore a broader range of carbon management technologies. This will include emissions from natural gas and industrial sources.
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Supporting Sustainable Energy Goals
These test centers are pivotal in advancing carbon management solutions, supporting a sustainable transition to cleaner energy. The DOE’s National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL) will oversee the projects, which are contingent on budget appropriations.