The basic objective of the European Commission’s Carbon Capture Use and Storage Communication in Q1 2024 must, of course, be to catalyse the rapid development of carbon capture and storage (‘CCS’) - which is essentially just infrastructure - both to serve as a transition technology to decarbonise certain hard to abate sectors and to lay the foundations for large scale permanent storage of ‘negative emission CO2’ from biogenic and direct air capture sources in the run up to 2050. European Commission modelling, and many other studies, concur that CCS will need to play a major role to enable the EU to meet its 2050 net zero target, as well as globally, and indeed in the US and China we see a similar push to accelerate this technology and infrastructure. It is equally clear that catalysing investment at scale in a new CCS grid and storage is urgent. Not least, due the introduction of the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (‘CBAM’), the EU will phase-out free ETS allowances for inter alia the steel, cement and fertiliser industries, staring already in 2026, with full application of the ETS by 2036. At the same time, the EU is restricting the issue of free allowances to all energy intensive industries under the ETS reform, even when not covered by the CBAM.
The Brief explores pathways to promote a sustainable agricultural trade regime for the EU. We identify three challenges and propose three potential paths forward. We discuss potential implications of the [...]
The rewable energy resources within EU27 are highly dominated by wind and solar energy delivering electricity as output. As electrification is the most efficient way to deliver the energy services [...]
Manufacturing firms in the EU face the double challenge of decarbonisation and (international) competitive pressure. Based on the key findings of the 2024 EIB investment survey and considering the economic [...]
Regulation 1370/2007, as amended by the Fourth Railway Package, set the date of 25 December 2023 for the opening to competition of services subject to public service obligations. As opposed [...]
This policy brief contends that a new approach to Long Term Contracts (LTCs) in European competition policy based on new facts, new realities and a revised reasoning must be urgently [...]
In the North Seas region, a coalition of 9 countries expressed the ambition to quadruple their offshore wind capacity from 30 GW to 120 GW by 2030, and to then [...]
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