That is a very interesting document and proves that the Government is actually getting some decent advice.
Whether it is feasible or not is another matter.
I suppose the entry on page 190 was missed? I was looking for their suggestions for under sea. I've been aware of the deep storage for a while, the sediment calcifier was new to me.
However this paragraph is important.
GGR is Greenhouse Gas Reduction.
Biomass policy is highly interdependent with GGR deployment. Sustainable biomass is
a unique renewable organic material, and the future availability of sustainable biomass
directly influences the scale GGRs such as BECCS and biochar can deploy to
It occurs to me that the government is looking to take a bite out of each end. As has been long known, trees are a fast and scalable method for removing carbon from the atmosphere. In short you plant small and it removes BIG. The issue has always been that unless you cut that wood and then turn it into product which is then used for hundreds of years, without being burned or buried, then it returns that captured CO2 back to the atmosphere.
This paragraph above seems to encourage sequestration in trees, or other biomass, burning that biomass and capturing the carbon and storing it. This is a very strong negative CO2 approach which takes carbon out at both ends allowing the biomass to absorb (literally), the carbon from the air, then to use that biomass to generate clean electricity and then take the CO2 from the burning and lock it away back in the earth.
I won't comment on viable or fairytale, but the approach is at least viable.
Other comments from the article
this one under key commitments.
Secure a final investment decision on a large-scale nuclear plant by the end of this
Parliament whilst taking measures to inform investment decisions during the next
Parliament on further nuclear projects as we work towards our net zero target.
Explore the system need and case for further market intervention for long duration
storage and hydrogen in power.
This document covers a LOT of bases and has, on the surface, a reasonable approach to the whole solution. It is by no means a bit of "fluff" churned out in 2 months.