Trevor Hutchings, the chief executive of the Renewable Energy Association, a trade body whose members include the biomass industry, noted that the UK government’s plans to reach net zero by 2050 relied on BECCS and other forms of carbon capture.
“The paper highlights many of the complexities and risks around BECCS, yet it’s important to recognise that, without BECCS and other forms of negative emissions, we will not achieve our legally binding net zero targets,” Hutchings said.
He added: “It is clear that BECCS lifecycle emissions depend heavily on feedstock choice, with wastes, residues and other biogenic sources offering materially different outcomes. The focus should be on deploying BECCS sustainably within a wider renewable energy system that delivers emissions reductions, energy security and affordability.”
A spokesperson for the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero rejected the report’s findings. “We do not recognise these claims,” they said. “No final decisions around the deployment of large-scale bioenergy with carbon capture and storage projects have been made, and any support would need to provide value for money for taxpayers and meet our sustainability criteria.”
