Tax credits for carbon capture utilization and storage (CCUS) (CCS)| ieefa.org
Coal use by U. S. electric-power producers is falling quickly after a short-lived post-pandemic bump April 3, 2023 (IEEFA) — The United States is quickly approaching an electricity sector milestone: in 2026, half of the coal-fired generation capacity will have closed since it peaked in 2011, according to a new report from the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis (IEEFA).| ieefa.org
Underperforming carbon capture projects considerably outnumber successful projects globally, and by large margins. Is the global push for new carbon capture projects an emissions-reduction solution, or is it greenwash and a subsidy harvesting exercise to extend the life of fossil fuel assets?| ieefa.org
Accelerating the transition to a diverse, sustainable and profitable energy economy| ieefa.org
IEEFA’s European LNG Tracker is an interactive data set to visualise Europe’s LNG infrastructure, demand and capacity outlook, and import and export flows. (Updated: February 2025)| ieefa.org
Sleipner and Snøhvit demonstrate carbon capture and storage is not without material ongoing risks that may ultimately negate some or all the benefits it seeks to create.| ieefa.org
Construction costs for Shell’s petrochemical plant in Pennsylvania were more than double the street-estimated cost.| ieefa.org
Solar’s market share topped 10 percent in ERCOT in March.| ieefa.org
While Europe has been focusing on ways to reduce gas demand and, consequently, LNG demand, the U.S. has been increasing its LNG export capacity and is planning new terminals.| ieefa.org
Carbon capture and storage (CCS) is a 50-year-old technology with variable results in capturing and storing carbon dioxide. Project developers have almost always reused the captured carbon for enhanced oil recovery (EOR), producing oil and gas and more emissions. Successful CCUS exceptions mainly exist in the natural gas processing sector serving the fossil fuel industry, leading to further emissions.| ieefa.org