Carbon Capture and Storage
Carbon capture and storage (CCS) is a technology to reduce atmospheric carbon dioxide by capturing CO2 either directly from the air or from emission sources (like power plants), then compressing and storing it permanently in geological formations or other long-term sinks. It is proposed as a climate mitigation strategy to reduce emissions while allowing continued fossil fuel use.
Real World
Norway's Sleipner project, operational since 1996, injects around one million tonnes of CO2 annually into a saline aquifer beneath the North Sea, making it one of the world's longest-running commercial CCS operations.
Exam Focus
Evaluate CCS by weighing cost and scalability against emissions reduction potential — 'evaluate' questions expect a justified conclusion, not just pros and cons.
How well did you know this?