September 20, 2023
By Amal ahmed
As federal money flows to carbon
capture and storage, Texas bets on an undersea bonanza
Unused oil rigs sit in the Gulf of
Mexico near Port Fourchon, Louisiana in 2010. Texas has begun to award
leases allowing companies to store carbon beneath the Gulf. Credit:
REUTERS/Lee Celano
Over the last century, the state of Texas has
reaped billions of dollars by allowing companies to burrow into the
floor of the Gulf of Mexico to extract oil and gas. Now, the General
Land Office — the state agency tasked with protecting the vulnerable
Texas shoreline and other natural resources — is eyeing carbon
sequestration as the next industry to develop in the Gulf.
Angling for a share of $12 billion in federal funding for such
projects under the 2021 Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act,
companies are competing to build carbon capture plants next to onshore
oil wells, gas wells and other polluting facilities along the coast.
At the same time, they are applying for offshore leases that will
allow them to store that heat-trapping carbon dioxide deep beneath the
seafloor.
Crucial to the effort are a stream of U.S. government grants, followed
by generous tax credits for every ton of carbon stored.
In September 2021, the General Land Office, or GLO, awarded its first
lease for carbon sequestration on 40,000 acres of state-owned land
near Port Arthur to Talos Energy, a Houston-based oil and gas company.
The oil giant Chevron has a 50% stake in the project, known as Bayou
Bend, which if completed could be the nation’s first offshore carbon
storage site.
Last month the GLO announced that it had awarded six more leases for
offshore carbon storage that would generate $130 million in bonus
payments for the state’s school fund. And in February, the Port of
Corpus Christi, the nation’s top port for oil exports and an economic
engine for Texas, said it had received $16.4 million in federal
funding to conduct a feasibility study for both onshore and offshore
carbon storage projects. The research will be conducted with Texas A&M
University, the University of Texas, Talos and Howard Energy Partners,
a San Antonio gas company.
The GLO declined to provide details about the six offshore leases
granted last month, from the location or size of the storage sites to
the identities of the companies involved. Despite its August
announcement that the projects had been greenlighted, the agency said
the leases had not yet been formally “executed.”
The oil and gas industry maintains that carbon capture and storage
technology, or CCS, can significantly reduce greenhouse gas emissions
and hasten the nation’s progress toward net-zero status — the point at
which the volume of heat-trapping gases released by power plants, oil
refineries, factories and other major emitters would be equal to what
is removed.
But environmentalists and scientists argue that CCS does not live up
to those claims. So far, the technology has yet to be widely deployed
and the results have been mixed, meaning that emissions continue to
increase even as billion-dollar plants for carbon capture and
sequestration are built out.
Relying on the oil and gas industry’s data, the
nonprofit Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis
reported last September that 10 of 13 major CCS projects around the
globe had failed or underperformed by wide margins. “It doesn’t work
for as long as people claim it does, and there are significant
uncertainties about how long it can be stored underground,” said
Dennis Wamsted, an energy analyst at the institute.
Carbon capture technology essentially acts as a giant filter. When
natural gas is burned at a power plant, most of the emissions
typically flow directly into the atmosphere. But when a capture
facility is attached to the power plant’s smokestacks, gases fed
through the facility separate the carbon molecules from other
pollutants through a series of chemical reactions.
The isolated carbon molecules can then be pressurized and compressed
into a liquid that in theory is transported through a pipeline to a
sequestration well, more or less modeled after an oil and gas drilling
well. At this stage, the CO2 is sent back underground and trapped
under layers of rock and sediment.
The threat of leaks and explosions
Leakage is a major concern. In another study casting doubt on the
viability of CCS, Italian researchers estimated that if storage wells
leaked at a rate of 0.1 percent — a likely scenario, based on what
scientists have observed so far — an additional 25 gigatons of carbon
would be added to the atmosphere by 2100.
Scientists, environmentalists and frontline communities also worry
that the pipelines that transport pressurized carbon dioxide to
storage wells could explode, putting nearby communities at risk: Three
years ago in Satartia, Miss., dozens of people were hospitalized and
hundreds evacuated after a CO2 pipeline ruptured. Emergency responders
were impeded when the heavy concentration of carbon dioxide in the air
prevented their vehicles from working.
Offshore injection projects like those proposed in the Gulf present
other challenges. Sequestered carbon dioxide can move through geologic
layers, particularly when older oil and gas wells already provide
pathways. At an early CCS project in Norway, for example, researchers
found that carbon stored beneath the seafloor began to migrate upward
toward shallower rock layers, posing the possibility of leaks. Those
injection wells were originally drilled in the late 1990s and have
since been under constant monitoring and study.Globally, there are no
uniform guidelines for how long CCS wells need to be monitored, even
though their reliability remains uncertain, Wamsted said.
Nonetheless, Texas has enthusiastically entered the fray. For the
state, which has long channeled royalties from oil and gas leases into
funding for public schools — some $3.7 billion has flowed into state
coffers since the state began leasing offshore land for drilling in
the 1960s — the potential dividends of undersea carbon storage are
clear.
Onshore, CCS projects are proliferating as well, mainly around the
petrochemical refineries on the Gulf Coast and the massive oil and gas
drilling fields in the Permian Basin in West Texas. Oil executives say
the existing pipeline infrastructure in the basin, coupled with the
federal incentives, makes it a prime location for CCS, with tax
credits flowing for every ton of carbon captured and injected
underground.
Even the King Ranch in South Texas, one of the largest cattle ranching
operations in the country, may soon have a carbon capture and storage
plant, in this case pulling the emissions from belching cows and
manure out of the ambient air.
Inevitably, the CCS projects announced to date raise questions about
whether they will prop up the oil and gas industry for years to come
rather than speed the effort to phase out fossil fuel production and
consumption. Add in the persistent doubts about the capture technology
and the potential leakage from storage wells, and critics ask whether
the federal incentives will do more harm than good.
“What we are witnessing is a tremendous industry-led push to promote
carbon capture and storage as its lifeline,” said Nikki Reisch, the
director of the climate and energy program at the Center for
International Environmental Law. “It is their get out of jail free
card — it mainstreams the notion that we can continue using fossil
fuels into the future.”
Wamsted points to the first and only CCS facility to operate so far at
a U.S. power plant: the Petra Nova facility, which was tacked onto a
1970s-era coal plant at the W.A. Parish Generating Station outside
Houston. The capture and storage operation received $190 million in
funding from the federal Department of Energy and went online in late
2016.
“It claimed it was capturing 90% of the carbon, but our research
showed that it was likely capturing 70 to 75% of the carbon coming
through the project,” Wamsted said. “What you get down to is the fact
that carbon capture equipment that has been run, tested and operated
so far does not operate nearly as well as proponents say.”
And the CCS facility required its own natural gas generator to operate
— emitting methane, an even more potent heat-absorbing gas that was
not captured at all.
In another environmental paradox, Petra Nova’s captured carbon was
used for “enhanced oil recovery,” a technique in which pressurized CO2
is pumped into an existing oil or gas well to squeeze out the last of
the fuel deposits. After the CCS facility was mothballed in 2020, a
spokesperson for NRG Energy, which backed the project, was quoted as
attributing the decision to a nosedive in oil prices. The carbon
capture facility reopened on Sept. 5.
Locally, community advocates pushed for the Parish coal plant to be
shut down altogether because of concerns about climate change and air
quality. Instead, after the infusion of $1 billion in investment by
private companies and the federal government, the coal plant is likely
to remain open for years.
Area residents are suffering the consequences. A 2018 study by Rice
University researchers linked air pollution from the coal plant,
including sulfur dioxide and ozone emissions, to hundreds of excess
deaths and cases of asthma and other respiratory illnesses in the
region.
“These are communities that are already putting up with chronic and
neglected air pollution problems,” said Alexander Spike, a climate
justice advocate for the group Air Alliance Houston. “Industry is not
completely up front about what carbon capture means for communities,
so these communities are getting the short end of the stick at the
profit of industry.”
Advocates of the technology counter that CCS is simply one way forward
in the complex and daunting task of reducing greenhouse gas emissions
to save the planet. “This absolutely helps solve the problem, as a
tool in the kit,” said Susan Hovorka, a research scientist at the
Bureau of Economic Geology at the University of Texas and the
principal investigator for the university’s Gulf Coast Carbon Center.
“Now is not the time to say we throw out the tool.”
A bid for state “primacy’’
That Texas came to own the oil-rich land beneath the seafloor is, in
some ways, a quirk of history. In 1836, when Sam Houston is said to
have drawn the boundaries of the independent Republic of Texas, he
extended its coastal border 10.3 miles outward, following Spanish
colonial precedent. Texas entered the Union nine years later, and for
nearly a century afterward, the U.S. government paid no mind to the
boundary, allowing the state to do what it pleased.
But when oil began flowing from those state-owned lands, federal
officials began to take an interest. States like Louisiana and
Mississippi only claimed land rights 3.5 miles from the shore, and any
royalties from oil and gas recovered past that boundary were collected
by the federal government.
From the 1940s until 1953, the states and the federal government
battled for ownership of submerged lands: Three separate lawsuits
wound their way to the U.S. Supreme Court, and the issue was debated
in Congress.
Today, although Texas still owns all of the land within 10.3 miles of
its coast, it does not have sole authority to greenlight carbon
sequestration wells in the Gulf of Mexico. Classified as “Class VI
wells,” all such sites are currently regulated by the federal
Environmental Protection Agency.
But Texas and Louisiana, another state that is ramping up CCS
projects, have asked the EPA for “primacy” in regard to the wells,
which would allow state agencies to grant permits for and oversee
them.
Critics say that if the EPA were to grant states primacy, removing the
federal hurdles, sequestration wells would acquire permits for
underwater carbon storage at a quicker pace. States already permit and
regulate other types of injection wells on land, known as Class II
wells, which are used for enhanced oil recovery, said Paige Powell, a
policy expert at Commission Shift, a watchdog group that seeks reforms
in oil and gas oversight in Texas.
In Texas, securing primacy would mean that the EPA handed over
authority to the state Railroad Commission, which has a spotty track
record on enforcing existing oil and gas regulations. “When you look
at Class II injection wells, we see induced seismicity and sinkholes,”
Powell said. “We’re seeing blowouts that are like geysers.”
“We’ve been trying to make the case that the Railroad Commission is
mismanaging its Class II program, and the EPA should not give them any
more authority,” she added.
The commission is currently responsible for cleaning up and
maintaining thousands of abandoned oil and gas wells that bankrupt
companies have left behind all over the state. In the future, the
state may also be on the hook for abandoned CCS projects: Its lease
agreement for the Bayou Bend project, for example, says the GLO will
take over management of carbon storage wells if the investors decide
to walk away from the venture.
“Our lessees are required to follow all state and federal laws. The
permitting process … from the Environmental Protection Agency includes
evaluation and planned mitigation of potential environmental risks and
continuous monitoring during the injection phase of the project,” the
agency said in a written statement.
At the same time, Texas lawmakers have sought to deflect corporate
responsibility for any problems arising at sequestration wells from
the oil and gas industry. House Bill 4557, introduced last spring in
the hope of encouraging investment in CCS projects, would have limited
the types of civil suits residents could bring against companies in
the event of a disaster. The bill died in committee, but Powell says
it is likely that discussions will be revived in two years when the
Legislature next meets; it convenes for five months every other year.
Given the momentum gathering for CCS projects in Texas, environmental
advocates fear the consequences of ceding regulatory control to the
state.
“The world standard for carbon sequestration is 99% of the CO2 stored
for a thousand years,” Powell said. “That means we need to monitor it
for a thousand years. But there are major concerns that companies are
going to be able to hand over their liability for carbon injection
wells to the state after 10 or 50 years.”
Disclosure: Air Alliance Houston, NRG Energy, Rice University and
Texas A&M University have been financial supporters of The Texas
Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in
part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors.
Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune's journalism.
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