CCUS Renaissance
Will it finally come?

webinar
In anticipation of the 10th St. Petersburg International Gas Forum

16 July 2020

1 p.m. – 2 p.m., CET

sponsor
organisers
16 july | 1 p.m., CET
Broadcast
16 july | 1 p.m., CET
Broadcast
16 july 2020
About the webinar
16 july 2020
About the webinar
CCUS Renaissance: will it finally come?
Carbon Capture Utilization and Storage has had a long history. It has been applied extensively in the natural gas domain for treatment of natural gas (sour gas) and the production of CO2 for enhanced gas recovery (EGR). Interest for CCUS grew steadily with the increase of climate mitigation and green power production.
CCUS was seen as an excellent technology to decarbonize existing power systems quickly and effectively. The CO2 itself could then be stored underground or used for chemical production or enhanced oil recovery.
However, this never happened and CCUS stalled. In recent years the interest for CCUS has re-emerged but not for the power sector. Hard to decarbonize sectors like industry, steel, cement and chemistry look towards this technology as a potential lifeline. In addition, starting an hydrogen economy by first producing blue hydrogen from natural gas with CCS is seen as a serious option. Contributing to a renaissance of CCUS. But will it now finally come?

Leon Stille, General manager EDI will share his vision on prospects and potential development of CCUS projects.
CCUS Renaissance: will it finally come?
Carbon Capture Utilization and Storage has had a long history. It has been applied extensively in the natural gas domain for treatment of natural gas (sour gas) and the production of CO2 for enhanced gas recovery (EGR). Interest for CCUS grew steadily with the increase of climate mitigation and green power production.
CCUS was seen as an excellent technology to decarbonize existing power systems quickly and effectively. The CO2 itself could then be stored underground or used for chemical production or enhanced oil recovery.
However, this never happened and CCUS stalled. In recent years the interest for CCUS has re-emerged but not for the power sector. Hard to decarbonize sectors like industry, steel, cement and chemistry look towards this technology as a potential lifeline. In addition, starting an hydrogen economy by first producing blue hydrogen from natural gas with CCS is seen as a serious option. Contributing to a renaissance of CCUS. But will it now finally come?

Leon Stille, General manager EDI will share his vision on prospects and potential development of CCUS projects.

Date and time
Thursday 16 July
1 p.m. – 2 p.m., CET
Webcasting
live stream is free of charge
Simultaneous translation
available for russian- and english- speaking audiences
About webinar
Key points addressed
about webinar
Key points addressed
1
historic CCUS development
2
key projects
3
cost evolution
4
innovation pathways
5
potential of new applications of CCUS
1
historic CCUS development
2
key projects
3
cost evolution
4
innovation pathways
5
potential of new applications of CCUS
about the webinar
Participants
about the webinar
Participants
Ekaterina Kravetskaya
moderator
Marketing Director Russia at Energy Delta Institute (EDI), Business Development Advisor at N.V. Nederlandse Gasunie Representation office in Russia
Leon Stille
expert
General Manager of the Energy Delta Institute (EDI), over 15 year of experience in energy companies (Alliander, Frames) and in the Netherlands Organization for Applied Scientific Research (TNO). He holds an MSc in renewable energy technology and BSc in Earth Sciences from the University of Utrecht
series of webinars
Calendar of activities
series of webinars
Calendar of activities
1
Thursday 9 July
1 p.m. – 2 p.m., CET
New energy business models in the times of crisis
read more →
2
Thursday 16 July
1 p.m. – 2 p.m., CET
CCUS Renaissance: will it finally come?
3
Thursday 23 July
1 p.m. – 2 p.m., CET
Global gas markets in the times of instability: current trends and future perspectives
read more →
Organisers
Organisers
support
Sponsor
support
Sponsor
Market position
Gazprombank is one of the top three banks in Russia and one of the biggest financial institutions in Central and Eastern Europe.
Range of services
The Bank offers an extensive range of services to corporate and private customers, serving the key sectors of the Russian economy, including the gas, oil, chemicals and petrochemicals, metals, power generation, engineering, transport, construction, communications, agri-industrial, trade and other industries
Retail business
Gazprombank's retail business is focused on providing modern high-tech products and services. As at the beginning of 2020, the Bank was serving approximately 5 million private customers. In 2019, it had a retail loan portfolio in excess of 550 billion rubles and a retail deposit portfolio of more than 480 billion rubles.
support
Media partners
support
Media partners

Event.Online