The European Renewable Policy Framework Supporting Green Growth

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European renewable policy framework The European renewable policy framework establishes regulations, incentives, and funding mechanisms that encourage investment in sustainable electricity generation technologies.

The development of robust and extensive carbon pipeline infrastructure is arguably the most challenging bottleneck and the most critical enabler for scaling CCUS across Europe. Pipelines represent the most cost-effective and energy-efficient method for transporting large volumes of captured CO2 over long distances, which is necessary to connect geographically dispersed industrial emitters with centralized, geologically suitable storage sites (mainly in the North Sea).

The current infrastructure landscape is nascent and fragmented, consisting of a few early-stage, localized projects. The transition requires a massive investment in new, dedicated infrastructure, since CO2 must be transported at high pressures in a supercritical state, demanding specialized materials and safety protocols. The planning and permitting process for these pipelines is complex, crossing national borders and often facing public scrutiny regarding safety and land use.

The prevailing trend is the creation of shared 'backbone' or 'trunk' lines—similar to natural gas grids—that can serve multiple emitters within an industrial cluster and then connect to international export points. Key challenges include establishing a clear regulatory framework for cross-border transport, defining fair access tariffs and ownership models for shared infrastructure, and ensuring that the network is 'future-proofed' with sufficient capacity to accommodate projected CO2 volumes from future emitters. Without this large-scale, interconnected pipeline network, CCUS cannot evolve beyond a collection of isolated, small-scale projects.

Carbon Pipeline Infrastructure Europe: FAQs
Why are dedicated pipelines necessary for CO2 transport?
Pipelines are the most cost-effective and efficient method for moving the large volumes of CO2 required to make CCUS a climatically significant solution, particularly when transporting the CO2 over long distances in its dense, supercritical state.

What is the main non-technical challenge in building cross-border CO2 pipelines?
The primary challenge is the lack of harmonized international and national regulatory frameworks for planning, permitting, and allocating the financial risks and responsibilities across different sovereign territories.

What does the concept of a 'shared backbone' or 'trunk' line refer to?
It refers to the development of a large-capacity, shared pipeline network designed to gather CO2 from numerous industrial emitters within an entire region or country before transporting it to a centralized storage site.

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