Climate change
Why and when?
CCS chain
Storage/Valuation
BioCCS


CO2 emissions and climate change

Today, there is a scientific consensus with respect to the extent of the global warming observed since the 1980s as a result of an increase in CO2 anthropogenic emissions. Climate change could lead to major disasters: an increase in the frequency and violence of hurricanes, storms and flooding, acidification of the earth’s oceans, desertification on the African continent, etc.

The main culprits are major industrial facilities (thermal power stations, cement works or refineries, etc.), which are responsible for almost two thirds of CO2 emissions worldwide.

And yet the energy demand is set to rise significantly in the coming decades, driven by the development of countries such as China or India. In particular, fossil fuels will continue to be used to produce electricity, pending the development of the renewable energies that will gradually replace them.

Against this background, controlling CO2 emissions – and especially those produced by industrial facilities – appears to be a matter of urgency. In addition to the necessary improvements in terms of energy efficiency, one particular solution is emerging as one of the most promising options for the large-scale limitation of these emissions making it possible to tackle the risk of climate change: the capture of CO2 at its production source, its transportation and then its underground storage (CCS). This technology, which was seen as a curiosity just a few years ago, is now being unanimously studied and tested around the globe.

Key figures

Temperature increase between 1990 and 2100 of between 1.4°C and 5.8°C. Over the same period, the average sea level is likely to rise by between 9 and 88 cm.
In 35 years, the thickness of the Arctic sea ice cap has fallen from 3.1 to 1.9 m.