open access publication

Article, 2024

A Comprehensive Assessment of Carbon Dioxide Removal Options for Germany

Earth's Future, ISSN 2328-4277, Volume 12, 5, 10.1029/2023ef003986

Contributors

Borchers, Malgorzata 0000-0002-6392-1216 (Corresponding author) [1] Förster, Johannes 0000-0003-0174-926X (Corresponding author) [1] Thrän, Daniela 0000-0002-6573-6401 [1] [2] Beck, Silke [1] Thoni, Terese 0000-0002-9129-6198 [1] Korte, Klaas 0000-0002-9882-9348 [1] Gawel, Erik 0000-0003-3634-9717 [1] Markus, Till [1] Schaller, Romina 0000-0003-2245-046X [1] Rhoden, Imke 0000-0001-9533-0536 [3] Chi, Yaxuan [4] Dahmen, Nicolaus [4] Dittmeyer, Roland 0000-0002-3110-6989 [4] Dolch, Tobias 0000-0001-6038-6695 [5] Dold, Christian 0000-0002-6035-5597 [6] Herbst, Michael [3] Heß, Dominik [4] Kalhori, Aram Alimohammad 0000-0002-0652-8987 [7] Koop-Jakobsen, Ketil 0000-0002-1540-6594 [5] Li, Zhan [7] Oschlies, Andreas 0000-0002-8295-4013 [8] Reusch, Thorsten B H 0000-0002-8961-4337 [8] Sachs, Torsten 0000-0002-9959-4771 [7] Schmidt-Hattenberger, Cornelia [7] Stevenson, Angela [8] Wu, Jiajun [8] Yeates, Christopher [7] Mengis, Nadine 0000-0003-0312-7069 (Corresponding author) [8]

Affiliations

  1. [1] Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research
  2. [NORA names: Germany; Europe, EU; OECD];
  3. [2] Deutsches Biomasseforschungszentrum
  4. [NORA names: Germany; Europe, EU; OECD];
  5. [3] Forschungszentrum Jülich
  6. [NORA names: Germany; Europe, EU; OECD];
  7. [4] Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
  8. [NORA names: Germany; Europe, EU; OECD];
  9. [5] Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research
  10. [NORA names: Germany; Europe, EU; OECD];

Abstract

Abstract To reach their net‐zero targets, countries will have to compensate hard‐to‐abate CO 2 emissions through carbon dioxide removal (CDR). Yet, current assessments rarely include socio‐cultural or institutional aspects or fail to contextualize CDR options for implementation. Here we present a context‐specific feasibility assessment of CDR options for the example of Germany. We assess 14 CDR options, including three chemical carbon capture options, six options for bioenergy combined with carbon capture and storage (BECCS), and five options that aim to increase ecosystem carbon uptake. The assessment addresses technological, economic, environmental, institutional, social‐cultural and systemic considerations using a traffic‐light system to evaluate implementation opportunities and hurdles. We find that in Germany CDR options like cover crops or seagrass restoration currently face comparably low implementation hurdles in terms of technological, economic, or environmental feasibility and low institutional or social opposition but show comparably small CO 2 removal potentials. In contrast, some BECCS options that show high CDR potentials face significant techno‐economic, societal and institutional hurdles when it comes to the geological storage of CO 2 . While a combination of CDR options is likely required to meet the net‐zero target in Germany, the current climate protection law includes a limited set of options. Our analysis aims to provide comprehensive information on CDR hurdles and possibilities for Germany for use in further research on CDR options, climate, and energy scenario development, as well as an effective decision support basis for various actors. Plain Language Summary Countries aiming to achieve net‐zero emissions will have to remove the remaining carbon dioxide from the atmosphere through carbon dioxide removal (CDR). However, current assessments of CDR options rarely consider socio‐cultural or institutional aspects or set the CDR options in the specific context of their implementation. In this study, researchers conducted the first context‐specific feasibility assessment of CDR options in Germany, considering six dimensions, including technological, economic, environmental, institutional, and social‐cultural aspects. The study assessed 14 CDR options, including chemical carbon capture options, bioenergy combined with carbon capture and storage, and options to increase ecosystem carbon uptake. The study found that CDR options like cover crops or seagrass restoration face low implementation hurdles but have small CO 2 removal potentials, while options like woody‐biomass combustion or mixed‐feedstock biogas production have high CDR potentials but face large economic and institutional hurdles. The analysis aims to provide comprehensive information on CDR options for use in further research and as an effective decision support basis for a range of actors. Key Points More context‐specific assessments of carbon dioxide removal (CDR) options are needed to guide national net‐zero decision making Ecosystem‐based CDR options with comparably low implementation hurdles in Germany show relatively small CO 2 removal potentials High CDR potential options in Germany face high institutional, technological and societal hurdles linked in many ways to geological storage

Keywords

Abstract, BECCS, BECCS options, CDR options, CO 2, CO 2 emissions, Germany, Language Summary, Plain Language Summary, actors, analysis, aspects, assessment, atmosphere, basis, bioenergy, biogas production, capture, carbon, carbon capture, carbon capture options, carbon dioxide, carbon dioxide removal, carbon dioxide removal options, carbon dioxide removal potential, carbon uptake, climate, climate protection law, combination, combustion, comprehension, comprehensive assessment, comprehensive information, considerations, context, countries, crop, decision, decision support basis, development, dimensions, dioxide, ecosystem carbon uptake, emission, energy, energy scenario development, environmental feasibility, feasibility, geological storage, geological storage of CO 2 , hurdles, implementation, implementation hurdles, implementation opportunities, increase ecosystem carbon uptake, information, institutional aspects, institutional hurdles, law, net-zero emissions, net-zero targets, opportunities, opposition, options, plain, possibilities, potential, potential option, production, protection law, removal, removal options, research, restoration, scenario development, seagrass, seagrass restoration, social culture, social opposition, social-cultural aspects, societal hurdles, socio-cultural, storage, storage of CO 2, study, summary, support bases, system, system considerations, target, techno-economic, traffic light system, uptake

Funders

  • Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
  • Federal Ministry of Education and Research
  • Helmholtz Association of German Research Centres

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