Frontiers in Energy Research | |
Custodians of carbon: creating a circular carbon economy | |
Energy Research | |
Hannah J. Handford-Styring1  George R. M. Dowson2  Edward G. Platt2  Alex J. K. Newman2  Peter Styring2  | |
[1] The University of Sheffield, Sheffield, United Kingdom;UK Centre for Carbon Dioxide Utilisation, Chemical & Biological Engineering, The University of Sheffield, Sheffield, United Kingdom; | |
关键词: circular economy (CE); carbon; CO utilization; fiduciary duty; policy; social impact; LCA/TEA; behavioural change; | |
DOI : 10.3389/fenrg.2023.1124072 | |
received in 2022-12-14, accepted in 2023-04-21, 发布年份 2023 | |
来源: Frontiers | |
【 摘 要 】
To stand a chance of achieving net zero greenhouse gas emissions and in the implementation of UN Sustainable Development Goals society must move away from being consumers of carbon to being custodians. While SDG 7 focuses on clean energy, chemicals and materials are themselves energy, energy stored in chemical bonds. Behavioural change is needed to appreciate the societal value of carbon and to recycle carbon already present in the environment, so extracting more fossil carbon from the Earth is avoided. Society needs to develop new technologies such as carbon capture and utilisation to create value-added products from what is otherwise waste. To do this effectively, the social impact of change must be considered, its effect on the environment, and whether this transition makes economic sense. If there is social injustice, then new approaches are needed. If there is no environmental benefit, then interventions must be reconsidered. This becomes an iterative process seeking to achieve the best-balanced scenarios. As new technologies develop, interventions by governments providing aid to subsidise and accelerate new technologies will be needed. Care must be taken to ensure fiduciary duty is applied so the best possible use of public money is delivered. In this paper a systems approach is taken in developing a new circular carbon economy, where models are developed to include lifecycle, techno-economic, and social impact assessment studies into any policy development and commercialisation plans. It is vitally important to develop this methodological thinking early in that planning phase to avoid serious errors that could be costly financially, socially and environmentally. In early stages of development, a coarse-grained approach is required focusing on hotspot analysis. Once hotspots have been identified, finer grained analysis can be undertaken to develop rational approaches to process and policy development. It is vitally important that all disciplines are included within the development of such models, relying not only on engineers and scientists, but also social scientists, psychologists and financial experts. If such an approach is developed now, there is a good chance of identifying acceptable pathways to achieving sustainable development goals. This paper addresses gaps in the CO2 utilisation where social and fiscal issues are often overlooked.
【 授权许可】
Unknown
Copyright © 2023 Newman, Dowson, Platt, Handford-Styring and Styring.
【 预 览 】
Files | Size | Format | View |
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RO202310105044699ZK.pdf | 2399KB | download |