News- Afrikaans
News- Amharic
News- Arabic
News- Azerbaijani
News- Belarusian
News- Bulgarian
News- Bengali
News- Bosnian
News- Catalan
News- Cebuano
News- Corsican
News- Czech
News- Welsh
News- Danish
News- German
News- Greek
News- English
News- Esperanto
News- Spanish
News- Estonian
News- Basque
News- Persian
News- Finnish
News- French
News- Frisian
News- Irish
News- Galician
News- Gujarati
News- Hausa
News- Hawaiian
News- Hebrew
News- Hindi
News- Hmong
News- Croatian
News- Haitian
News- Hungarian
News- Armenian
News- Indonesian
News- Icelandic
News- Italian
News- Japanese
News- Javanese
News- Georgian
News- Kazakh
News- Khmer
News- Kannada
News- Korean
News- Kurdish
News- Kyrgyz
News- Latin
News- Luxembourgish
News- Lao
News- Lithuanian
News- Latvian
News- Malagasy
News- Maori
News- Macedonian
News- Malayalam
News- Mongolian
News- Marathi
News- Malay
News- Maltese
News- Myanmar
News- Dutch
News- Norwegian
News- Odia
News- Punjabi
News- Polish
News- Pashto
News- Portuguese
News- Romanian
News- Russian
News- Kinyarwanda
News- Sindhi
News- Sinhala
News- Slovak
News- Slovenian
News- Samoan
News- Shona
News- Albanian
News- Serbian
News- Swedish
News- Telugu
News- Thai
News- Turkmen
News- Turkish
News- Tatar
News- Ukrainian
News- Urdu
News- Uzbek
News- Vietnamese
News- Xhosa
News- Yoruba
News- Chinese-s
News- Chinese-t
News- Zulu
Home page
My news
Video news
Log in
Edit
Add news
Sign up
Search
Log out
Languages
Afrikaans
Albanian
Amharic
Arabic
Armenian
Azerbaijani
Basque
Belarusian
Bengali
Bosnian
Bulgarian
Catalan
Cebuano
Chinese (Simplified)
Chinese (Traditional)
Corsican
Croatian
Czech
Danish
Dutch
English
Esperanto
Estonian
Finnish
French
Frisian
Galician
Georgian
German
Greek
Gujarati
Haitian Creole
Hausa
Hawaiian
Hebrew
Hindi
Hmong
Hungarian
Icelandic
Igbo
Indonesian
Irish
Italian
Japanese
Javanese
Kannada
Kazakh
Khmer
Kinyarwanda
Korean
Kurdish
Kyrgyz
Lao
Latin
Latvian
Lithuanian
Luxembourgish
Macedonian
Malagasy
Malay
Malayalam
Maltese
Maori
Marathi
Mongolian
Myanmar (Burmese)
Nepali
Norwegian
Nyanja (Chichewa)
Odia (Oriya)
Pashto
Persian
Polish
Portuguese (Portugal, Brazil)
Punjabi
Romanian
Russian
Samoan
Scots Gaelic
Serbian
Sesotho
Shona
Sindhi
Sinhala (Sinhalese)
Slovak
Slovenian
Somali
Spanish
Sundanese
Swahili
Swedish
Tagalog (Filipino)
Tajik
Tamil
Tatar
Telugu
Thai
Turkish
Turkmen
Ukrainian
Urdu
Uyghur
Uzbek
Vietnamese
Welsh
Xhosa
Yiddish
Yoruba
Zulu
Arab times
How Saudi Arabia could become a leader in carbon capture on the road to net zero emissions
Carbon capture can achieve 14 percent of the global greenhouse gas emissions reductions needed by 2050 The Kingdom has set the bar high, with a carbon capture target of 44 million tons annually by 2035 RIYADH: As nations step up their efforts to achieve net zero carbon emission goals and mitigate the effects of climate change, oil and gas producing countries in particular are under tremendous pressure to make a swift transition to green energy sources and leave their petroleum assets underground. This is no small challenge. Carbon capture technologies could therefore prove be a vital lifeline for the energy industries of these countries, and Saudi Arabia is well placed to emerge as a global leader in the carbon capture sector. Carbon capture utilization and storage, or CCUS, technologies have been in use for decades to remove and sequester carbon dioxide emissions, and improve the quality of natural gas. Carbon capture achieves several goals, simultaneously reducing emission levels while also ensuring fossil fuels meet the world’s pressing energy needs and providing a mechanism to help meet net zero goals by 2050. According to Bloomberg, global investment in carbon capture and storage projects will reach $6.4 billion this year. The most natural method of carbon capture is as old as time itself: Photosynthesis, the process through which trees and plants absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and transform it into oxygen and energy.
Text to Speech
Select Voice
Volume
1
Rate
1
Pitch
1
Carbon capture can achieve 14 percent of the global greenhouse gas emissions reductions needed by 2050 The Kingdom has set the bar high, with a carbon capture target of 44 million tons annually by 2035 RIYADH: As nations step up their efforts to achieve net zero carbon emission goals and mitigate the effects of climate change, oil and gas producing countries in particular are under tremendous pressure to make a swift transition to green energy sources and leave their petroleum assets underground. This is no small challenge. Carbon capture technologies could therefore prove be a vital lifeline for the energy industries of these countries, and Saudi Arabia is well placed to emerge as a global leader in the carbon capture sector. Carbon capture utilization and storage, or CCUS, technologies have been in use for decades to remove and sequester carbon dioxide emissions, and improve the quality of natural gas. Carbon capture achieves several goals, simultaneously reducing emission levels while also ensuring fossil fuels meet the world’s pressing energy needs and providing a mechanism to help meet net zero goals by 2050. According to Bloomberg, global investment in carbon capture and storage projects will reach $6.4 billion this year. The most natural method of carbon capture is as old as time itself: Photosynthesis, the process through which trees and plants absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and transform it into oxygen and energy.