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Projects on CO2

 

 

ECCO (2008-2010)

IFP participates in ECCO (European value chain for CO2) , EU collaboration project under the FP7. The main objective of ECCO is to facilitate robust strategic decision making regarding early and future implementation of CO2 value chains.
 
ECCO, coordinated by SINTEF Energy Research, has a total budget of 5.35 M€ over three years, and gathers 18 partners from nine countries of the European Union, experts in the fields of the CSC.
 
IFP works on modeling technical and economic evaluation of the CSC chain with a focus on enhanced oil and gas recovery with CO2 injection (EOR/EGR).
 
>> More information on the ECCO project

 

 

COCATE (2010 - 2012)

Led by IFP, the European research project COCATE, the project brings eight other research and industrial partners: Le Havre Region Development Agency (France), Geogreen (France), Accoat (Denmark), SINTEF Energy Research (Norway), DNV (Norway), TNO (Netherlands), Port of Rotterdam NV (Netherlands) and SANERI (South Africa).
 
COCATE's objective is to analyze the conditions for transporting the flue gases emitted from several CO2-emitting industrial facilities with a view to pooling the capture process, and for exporting large quantities of captured CO2 to storage areas.
 
The Le Havre region and the Port of Rotterdam have been selected as test sites for the research work conducted by the partners involved in the COCATE project.
This 3-year project has a total budget of €4.5 million, nearly €3 million of which is contributed by the European Commission.
 
>> More information on the COCATE project
>> Press release: "Transporting CO2 - Launch of the European COCATE project led by IFP" (08/12/2009)

 

 

CESAR

CESAR (CO2 Enhanced Separation and Recovery) aims for a breakthrough in the development of low-cost post-combustion CO2 capture technology in order to provide an economically feasible solution for both new large scale power plants and retrofit of existing power plants.
 
CESAR is in the continuation of the previous FP6 integrated project CASTOR coordinated by IFP. The existing pilot built in Esbjerg power plant (Denmark) in the frame of this previous project will be re-used for CESAR.
 
For this project IFP will coordinate the research on advanced separation processes and will be in charge of development of new membrane contactors, development carried out with the SME Polymem and ENSIC-Nancy.
 
CESAR is a European FP7 project coordinated by TNO.
 
>> More information on the CESAR project

 

 

DECARBit

DECARBit - short for "Decarbonise it" - responds to the urgent need for further research and development in advanced pre-combustion capture techniques to substantially reduce emissions of greenhouse gases from fossil fuel power plants.
 
The project will accelerate the technology development and contribute to the deployment of large-scale carbon capture and storage (CCS) plants, in line with the adopted European policies for emission reductions.
 
Within the project, IFP is involved in the development of a technological innovation that consists in using adsorbents in a revolving-bed reactor at high temperature to separate the oxygen from air. Using oxygen rather than air in the reformer (or gasifier) reduces the overall cost of CO2 capture.
 
DECARBit is established by 16 legal entities constituting the core group of the project. Its activities comprise theoretical and experimental investigations leading to full pilot testing.
 
>> More information on the DECARBit project

 

 

CASTOR (completed)

This EC-funded and IFP-run project involves capturing and providing geological storage for 30% of the emissions released by large industrial facilities around Europe (conventional power stations, principally), i.e. for 10% of Europe’s CO2 emissions.
 
Castor brings together members from 11 EU countries, including 30 industrial firms (Dong Energy, Vattenfall, Repsol, Statoil, GDF Suez, Rohoel, etc) and 12 research institutes (IFP, BGRM, Imperial College, TNO, BGS, IFP, etc.).
 
It inaugurated its pilot industrial facility alongside a power plant run by Dong Energy (formerly Elsam) in Esbjerg, Denmark, on 15 mars 2006. This facility can capture one ton of CO2 an hour.
 
>> More information on the Castor project
>> More information on the industrial pilot unit of the Castor project

 

 

ENCAP (completed)

Vattenfall, an energy company, is running ENCAP, another FP6 project dealing with capturing CO2 from conventional power stations.
 
IFP is mainly involved in the Chemical Looping Combustion (CLC) subproject alongside Alstom, Siemens, Sintef, TNO and Chalmers University of Technology, among other partners. CLC technology is used to convert hydrocarbon fuel directly into CO2 and H2O. The oxygen is supplied via a metal oxide, alternately oxidized by air and reduced by the fuel.
IFP is thus working on methods for the industrial production of materials (metal oxide-based) intended for use in fluidized beds as well as the development of a natural gas-powered rotating CLC reactor designed for gas turbines.
 
>> More information on the ENCAP project

 

 

CO2ReMoVe (2006 - 2011)

CO2ReMoVe is another European project funded under FP6. The goal, here, is to find CO2 geological storage verification and surveillance systems.
 
The goal of the project is to propose the development and application of a range of monitoring techniques, applied across an integrated portfolio of storage sites such as Sleipner, Snovhit, In-Salah and Ketzin.
 
CO2ReMoVe gathers 27 partners spanning industrial firms, research centers and service providers with experience in CO2 geological storage.
 
In the CO2ReMoVe project, IFP is coordinating tasks associated with modeling efficiency on industrial sites providing geological storage for CO2.
 
>> More information on the CO2ReMoVe project

 

 

EU GEOCAPACITY (completed)

UE GeoCapacity aimed at developing a tool to appraise CO2 geological-storage capacity in aquifers, hydrocarbon reservoirs and unused coal seams.
Led by GEUS (Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland), the EU finded project gathered 26 partners.
IFP’s role involved coordinating storage-capacity assessments in oil and gas reservoirs, coal seams, and aquifers.
 
>> More information on the EU GeoCapacity project

 

 

DeSANNS (completed)

The DeSANNS (Design Synthesis and Application of Novel Nanoporous Sorbents) project’s goal was to develop new nanoporous materials for separation by adsorption, with a view to using them to purify hydrogen and capture CO2.
 
IFP’s role here was to contribute its experience with industrial issues: sharing information about applications, working on new process diagrams and most efficient material syntheses, providing preliminary economic assessments.
 
>> More information on the DeSANNS project

 

 

COACH (completed)

IFP was coordinating COACH, a project stemming from the agreement to work together against global warming that the European Union and China signed in 2006.
 
The eight Chinese and twelve European industrial firms, research centers and public-sector organizations working on this project have drafted the technical recommendations required to design a coal-fired power plant in China.
 
That plant will include facilities to capture CO2 and the project will also deal with transport and storage of CO2 in a mature oil and gas reservoir. Building work is scheduled to begin in 2011, and the capture and storage chain should come on stream in 2015.
 
>> More information on the COACH project

 

 

CAPRICE (completed)

Led by TNO, The project CAPRICE (CO2 capture using Amine Process International Cooperation and Exchange) aimed at developing the international cooperation in the field of CO2 capture by amines.
More specifically, findings from the European Castor project’s MEA (Mono-Ethanol-Amine) will be compared with those of the University of Regina (Canada) and ITC (International Test Center).
 
>> More information on the CAPRICE project

 

 

CO2GeoNet (completed)

The CO2GeoNet project aimed to improve CO2 storage conditions in deep geological strata.
It gathered 13 partner universities and research centers from France (IFP, BRGM), the UK (BGS, Imperial College, Heriot-Watt University), Norway (SINTEF, IRIS, NIVA), Italy (OGS, University of Rome), Germany (BGR), Holland (TNO) and Denmark (GEUS).

 
>> More information on the CO2GeoNet project

 

 

INCA-CO2 (completed)

Led by IFP, the project Inca-CO2 (International Co-operation Actions on CO2 Capture and Storage) aimed to coordinate and secure international exposure for Europe’s expertise in the field of CO2 capture.
IFP worked on this project with 6 European research centers and 4 leading industrial firms.


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