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Over the past decade, carbon capture and storage (CCS) has come to the fore as a way to manage carbon dioxide emissions contributing to climate change. This book examines its introduction into the political scene, different interpretations of its significance as an emerging technology and the policy challenges facing government and international institutions with respect to its development, deployment and regulation. The focus of the book is on the construction of arguments about CCS in the public sphere, the coalitions of actors who have articulated distinctive perspectives on CCS and the varied strategies governments have adopted to integrate it into climate and energy policies. The authors analyse the issues decision-makers now confront in encouraging the uptake of the technology, managing uncertainties and regulating attendant risks. The book includes case studies of the reception of CCS in seven OECD countries: Australia, Canada, Germany, the Netherlands, Norway, the United Kingdom and the United States. Developments in the EU form the subject of an eighth case study. The authors point to the political significance of CCS as a mitigation option offering a way forward for fossil fuels in a carbon constrained world, while also emphasizing the uncertainties that surround its future development and deployment. Students, scholars and researchers from a wide variety of fields who are interested in climate change, energy policy, and the politics and policy of the environment will find this book illuminating, as will officials and policy makers in international organizations and governments.
Edited by James Meadowcroft, Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada and Oluf Langhelle, University of Stavanger, Norway
Contents:1. The Politics and Policy of Carbon Capture and StorageJames Meadowcroft and Oluf Langhelle2. Technology Leader, Policy Laggard: CCS Development for Climate Mitigation in the US Political ContextJennie C. Stephens3. CCS in Australia: From Political Posturing to Policy PotentialDarren Sinclair and Neil Gunningham4. CCS in CanadaMark Jaccard and Jacqueline Sharp5. Technology as Political Glue: CCS in NorwayAndreas Tjernshaugen and Oluf Langhelle 6. Electricity Gap versus Climate Change: Electricity Politics and the Potential Role of CCS in Germany Barbara Praetorius and Christoph von Stechow7. CCS in the UK: Squaring Coal Use with Climate Change?Ivan Scrase and Jim Watson8. CCS in the Netherlands: Glass Half Empty or Half Full?Philip J. Vergragt9. CCS and the European Union: Magic Bullet or Pure Magic?Dag Harald Claes and Paal Frisvold 10. CCS in Comparative PerspectiveOluf Langhelle and James Meadowcroft 11. The Politics and Policy of CCS: The Uncertain Road AheadJames Meadowcroft and Oluf LanghelleIndex
'. . . the volume is a timely and informative text for students and academics, as well as for practitioners within international organizations and governments.'
Dariusz Wojakowski, Oluf Langhelle, Mateusz Stopa, Stanisław Nagy, Barbara Gąciarz, Thomas Michael Sattich, Norway) Langhelle, Oluf (University of Stavanger, Stanislaw Nagy, Barbara Gaciarz