| Literature DB >> 36185778 |
Eli Mitchell-Larson1, Myles Allen2.
Abstract
Interest in carbon offsetting is resurging among companies and institutions, but the vast majority of existing offerings fail to enable a credible transition to a durable net zero emission state. A clear definition of what makes an offsetting product "net zero compliant" is needed. We introduce the "proset", a new form of composite carbon credit in which the fraction of carbon allocated to geological-timescale storage options increases progressively, reaching 100% by the target net zero date, generating predictable demand for effectively permanent CO2 storage while making the most of the near-term opportunities provided by nature-based climate solutions, all at an affordable cost to the purchaser.Entities:
Keywords: Carbon credit; Carbon removal; Compensation claims; Durable net zero
Year: 2022 PMID: 36185778 PMCID: PMC9516513 DOI: 10.1007/s10584-022-03423-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clim Change ISSN: 0165-0009 Impact factor: 5.174
Fig. 1This simplified taxonomy of carbon credits distinguishes between removal and emission reduction/avoided emission carbon credits on the one hand and by the character of the carbon storage employed on the other hand. Indicative, non-exhaustive examples of carbon project types for each category are shown. Carbon project types with higher-durability, geological-timescale storage (which makes up an increasing percentage of a “proset”) are shaded in blue. Carbon removal with lower-durability storage is shaded in green. Note that “lower durability” does not mean impermanent; despite having in general higher reversal risks, these carbn storage methods can be de-risked and made “contractually permanent” through financial and legal mechanisms
Fig. 2CO2 storage method and cost for 2020–2050s- and first-order removal prosets. The figure depicts two illustrative removal prosets, a second-order (quadratic) 2020–2050 proset (left) and a first-order (linear) 2020–2050 proset (right). See main text for full definition. Percentages of lower-durability (primarily biosphere) and higher-durability (primarily lithosphere) storage shown as green and grey dashed lines, respectively. The cost (solid lines) of lower-durability storage is assumed to escalate linearly from $20/tCO2 in 2020 to $40/tCO2 in 2050, representing an approximate cost for forestation carbon credits that increases over time as the cheapest land is exhausted. These costs are in line with recent carbon removal procurements with a high share of forest carbon storage (e.g. Microsoft’s 2021 carbon removal procurement (Joppa 2020)). Higher-durability storage costs represent the assumed full-chain cost to remove, transport, and store 1 t of CO2. This is assumed to start at an initial cost of $100/tCO2 in 2020, representing a blend of carbon removal methods involving the capture and storage of high-purity streams of biogenic CO2, such as biogas separation, fermentation processes, and waste treatment (Bui et al. 2018; Irlam 2017). We assume that these costs initially begin declining toward $80/tCO2 in 2030 due to learning-by-doing as carbon storage projects begin to scale up. From 2030 to 2050, the dominant factor in the cost evolution is assumed to be the declining availability of cheaper, higher-purity point sources of CO2 leading to an ever-increasing reliance on lower-purity streams of CO2, including direct removal from the atmosphere. We therefore assume that by 2050, the steady-state cost of a blended portfolio of carbon removal with ultra-low risk of reversal (e.g. DACCS, mineralisation) approaches a backstop cost of $250/tCO2 reflecting the conservative end of claims of feasible long-term DACCS costs (Bui et al. 2018; Shayegh et al. 2021; Lackner and Azarabadi 2021). Forward-looking cost assumptions are inherently uncertain, not meant to be predictive, and not inclusive of the effects of demand. However, the general trend for a proset will hold: initial cost is low and mirrors the cost of biological carbon removal, but trends upward toward a backstop cost reflecting the future cost of higher-durability carbon removal. Arrows are included to indicate that the higher-durability fraction of a proset can be higher than the minimum threshold depending on the ambition of the buyer, but it must be above that escalating minimum threshold
Fig. 3Prosets packaged for given years are in practice created by aggregating a mix of lower-durability storage (green) and higher-durability storage (grey) carbon credits. Shown here are illustrative prosets intended for retirement in the years 2030 (roughly 10% higher-durability storage) and 2040 (roughly 40% higher-durability storage) of a 2020–2050s-order proset trajectory. If this 2030 proset went unsold and unretired, its constituent carbon credits could be repackaged in another year (with the appropriately escalated higher-durability storage fraction)