AUSTRALIA 
Rudd unveils carbon capture scheme
Friday, 19 September, 2008Australia is to invest $100 million to kick off a new global carbon capture and storage institute.
The institute will promote research and investment in technology for removing carbon dioxide which would otherwise contribute to global warming.
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Prime Minister Kevin Rudd, in a presentation to resource and energy industry leaders at Parliament House today, says carbon capture and storage had the potential to capture nine billion tonnes of carbon by 2050.
Massive reductions
That represented about 20 per cent of the total reduction needed to cap atmospheric levels at 450 parts per million.
Carbon capture and storage was not the total solution but was a large part of the solution, Mr Rudd says.
"We have got to crack the whip and make it happen".
The proposal will form the basis of Mr Rudd's presentation to the United Nations General Assembly in New York next week.
UK prime minister Gordon Brown had already offered support, Mr Rudd says.
The new institute would start out in Australia with the objective of helping meet the G8 commitment to have at least 20 industrial scale carbon capture and storage projects in operation by 2020.
Presently there are five pilot projects, including the Otway scheme in Victoria.
Technique 'not pie in sky'
Carbon capture and storage involves gathering carbon dioxide which would otherwise be emitted by a coal-fired power station or factory, compressing it for transport by pipeline and then injecting it into subterranean rock several kilometres beneath the earth's surface.
Dr Peter Cook, chief executive of the Cooperative Research Council for greenhouse gas technologies, says the process wasn't pie in the sky.
"This is science that has a firm base ... that has been developing for a number of years," he says.
Mr Rudd says any effective solution to climate change must deal with clean coal.
"It must deal with carbon capture and storage.
"Unless we deal with coal we are not dealing with a core part of the challenge."
There was a great danger the G8 ambition would end up on the long list of politically pious statements which lacked any machinery to make them happen, Mr Rudd says.
"We the government want this global carbon and storage institute in Australia to be the global go-to place across the board for clean coal technologies and their application. That is the ambition.
"Rather than simply put an idea out there, we have decided that we need to have some skin in the game. So we will be providing up to $100 million a year to fund this global carbon capture and storage institute."
Source: AAP

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Kevin Rudd has announced Australia is to invest in a new carbon capture and storage institute (AAP)