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Santos and Beach Energy to establish Australia’s first CCS hub

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Santos and Beach Energy to establish Australia's first CCS hub

Oil and gas giant Santos, along with its joint-venture partner Beach Energy, will be proceeding with their $220 million carbon capture and storage (CCS) hub in South Australia’s north. 

In a move hailed as a major milestone in the push towards net zero emissions by 2050, the Moomba plan has been successfully registered with the Clean Energy Regulator. This will allow the project to be qualified for carbon credits over a 25-year period. 

Santos Chief Executive Kevin Gallagher described the project as globally significant. 

“This carbon reduction project in the South Australian outback will be one of the biggest and lowest costs in the world and will safely and permanently store 1.7 million tonnes of carbon dioxide per year in the same reservoirs that held oil and gas in place for tens of millions of years,” he said. 

“This decision is a critical step in decarbonising natural gas on our path to new low-emissions and clean-burning fuels such as hydrogen.” 

Federal Energy Minister Angus Taylor said the Moomba CCS was the first one out of the carbon capture projects to be registered under the government’s Emissions Reduction Fund, with other projects expected to come

He also said that it was a major step forward for technology in Australia. 

“This is the first time a national government will award tradable, high-integrity carbon credits to large-scale projects that capture and permanently store carbon underground,” Minister Taylor said. 

Meanwhile, SA Energy Minister Dan van Holst Pellekaan said the storage hub would create 230 jobs during construction and will sustain more during its operation, making it critical for the South Australian economy.

“We want to be a world-class producer of clean fuels such as hydrogen to help power our economy and export to the world,” he said. 

“This infrastructure will become even more valuable over time, allowing South Australia to take carbon dioxide from many sources and store it underground.”  

Santos said the full lifecycle cost of the carbon storage was forecast to be less than $US24 per tonne with the first injection of CO2 targeted for 2024. 

The carbon to be stored represents about seven per cent of SA’s emissions and will cut emissions from gas production at Moomba by 70 per cent. 

With AAP 

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Eliza is a content producer and editor at Public Spectrum. She is an experienced writer on topics related to the government and to the public, as well as stories that uplift and improve the community.

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