Capturing carbon dioxide (CO2) to use or store remains one of the costliest ways to cut emissions. That means the technique â known as CCUS â has yet to scale up, still relies on taxpayer support and should only be pursued after other green solutions, key industry players told a recent conference in London. Companies and governments that depend heavily on fossil fuel revenues have long promoted CCUS technology as a way to carry on producing and consuming fossil fuels while keeping emissions down. But over 50 years since the first project began operating, CCUS is still barely used. According to the Global CCS Institute, just 50 facilities were running around the world in 2024, with the capacity to capture about a thousandth of global emissions. Most of those capture CO2 from gas facilities and pump it underground to squeeze more oil from reservoirs, a process called enhanced oil recovery (EOR). At this monthâs Carbon Capture Global Summit 2025 â organised by Leader Associates â business representatives admitted that the technology has failed to expand on a commercial scale despite strong government support. CCUS momentum has even âplateaued a wee bitâ in 2025, said Mhairidh Evans, head of CCUS research at consultancy Wood Mackenzie. Subsidies still needed Julia Dubinina, a former Shell manager now developing oil and gas firm Harbour Energyâs carbon storage business, was asked if CCUS is entering its âdeployment phaseâ. She replied that it is âtoo early to talk about scaleâ, adding âwe need to be careful of not trying to fly before we can walkâ. âThere is still quite a lot of work to be done,â she added. She remains cautious partly because âpublic funding is an absolute must for every project, and scaling is kind of limited when you need public funding for every single project,â she explained. The UK and Norwegian Prime Ministers are shown Equinorâs Northern Lights CCS facility on December 16, 2024 in Bergen, Norway. (Picture: Leon Neal/Reuters) The industry depends on subsidies because capturing and transporting CO2 is among the most expensive climate solutions. In 2021, Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change scientists reported that while solar and wind investments usually save money, CCUS costs $50-200 per tonne of CO2 captured. In a keynote speech at the conference, Katharina Beumelberg, sustainability chief at Heidelberg Materials â which produces cement, aggregates, concrete and asphalt â acknowledged the sectorâs reliance on taxpayer support. Praising the Norwegian governmentâs funding for one of the companyâs CCUS projects, she said: âWe need these funding processes to be able to do this pioneering work because, otherwise, from the private sector it would be unrealistic to get thereâ. She added: âWhatever we do in the end needs to make money.â Beumelberg called for more taxpayer support for CCUS. Noting that three-fifths of Heidelbergâs products are used in government-funded projects, she said governments should create a market for carbon-free products, ârecognising that a carbon-free product in the end does need to come with different pricing because it is carbon-freeâ. Katharina Beumelberg, Chief Sustainability and New Technologies Officer of Heidelberg Materials (Photo: Simon Callaghan) Because of its high cost, most experts say CCUS should be reserved for sectors that are hard to clean up in other ways like steel, chemicals and particularly cement. Expensive last resort Cement-making produces 8% of global emissions, more than any country apart from the US and China, as fossil fuels are burned to heat limestone and the chemical process itself releases CO2. But Rozemarijn Wesby, vice-president of CCUS at the worldâs biggest cement company Holcim, told the conference that even in cement, the high cost of CCUS means it is only the âlast piece of the puzzleâ. Thatâs because Holcimâs decarbonisation goal is more important than its CCUS goal, she said â and CCUS is one of the more expensive ways to cut emissions. For that reason, Holcim is first ensuring that its power is âgreenâ, fuels are âsustainable and renewableâ and emissions avoided âwherever possibleâ. Rozemarijn Wesby, Holcim VP CCUS and head of Business Development, speaks at the Carbon Capture Global Summit 2025 (Photo: Simon Callaghan) Evans of Wood Mackenzie echoed this, saying governments and companies should prioritise energy efficiency, then âelectrifying everything that we possibly can with renewables, then fuel switching [and] substitutingâ before âat the last, directly abating or removing carbon dioxideâ. Wesby stressed that using CCUS only as a last step limits costs and prevents oversized âdownstreamâ infrastructure. The CCUS infrastructure discussed at the conference included pipelines and trains to move CO2, terminals to store, compress and load it onto ships, and underground storage sites. A Nature study published this month, however, found that the worldâs CO2 storage potential is far more constrained than previously thought. Lead author Matthew Gidden of the University of Maryland argued in a post on CarbonBrief that governments should prioritise who gets access to storage space. Carbon capture for gas plants? Electricity is one of the easiest sectors to decarbonise because renewable power is often cheaper than fossil fuels. As of 2024, only five fossil-fuel power plants had CCUS, all of which used the CO2 for EOR. Only one, Huaneng Yangpu in China, is a gas power station and that is just a demonstration project. Nonetheless, the UK government financially supports a CCUS project at a gas plant in Englandâs Northeast and is considering support for another in Wales run by power firm Uniper. Mike Lockett, Uniperâs UK head, said that Germanyâs new centre right-led government had also âopened the door for gas-fired CCSâ. Supporters say such plants produce flexible and dispatchable power, unlike solar and wind. Critics argue batteries, demand management, nuclear and cross-border interconnections can provide sufficient backup. Greg Jackson, the chief executive of Octopus, a UK-based clean energy, electric vehicle services and heat pump company, said recently that â while itâs useful for cement â subsidising CCUS for energy is misguided. Octopus CEO Greg Jackson speaks to the UKâs finance minister Rachel Reeves on July 18, 2024 (Kirsty OâConnor/Treasury) Jackson, who is also an official adviser to the UK government, told the Financial Times Weekend Festival that the technology has âbeen a gift to the oil and gas industry to carry on what theyâre doing and carry on the fiction that somehow enormous amounts of public money should enable them to keep doing itâ. âItâs a boondoggle for oil and gas â and we would be better off in the UK just burning unabated gas, because the cheaper we make electricity, the cheaper our heat pumps and electric cars are going to be and they are the key to emissions reductions,â he said. Risk of pipeline leaks Building out CCUS on a large scale will involve vast CO2 pipeline networks. These come with risks: In 2020, a landslide caused a carbon pipeline to leak in the US state of Mississippi, hospitalising at least 45 people. High concentrations of CO2 can cause headaches, drowsiness, elevated heartbeat and blood pressure, and even death. Sep 10, 2025 Politics Ethiopiaâs preparedness puts it ahead of Nigeria in bid to host COP32, campaigners say Ethiopiaâs logistics, infrastructure and climate diplomacy make it seem better placed to host the 2027 UN climate talks than its West African rival â for now Read more Sep 10, 2025 Clean Energy Frontier Digging beyond oil: Saudi Arabia bids to become a hub for energy transition minerals The top crude exporter is using its oil riches to position itself as a major player in clean energy supply chains. Investors are interested, but hurdles remain Read more Sep 9, 2025 News After record-hot summer, London plans to trial air con on âdeep Tubeâ trains As climate change brings longer, hotter summers, Transport for London and Network Rail are racing to modernise the cityâs 19th-century transport system Read more Climate Home News asked Niko Bosnjak, policy and communications lead at carbon pipeline operator Open Grid Europe (OGE), which is converting German gas pipelines to carry CO2, if similar leaks could happen in Europe. He said he had heard about the Mississippi incident, although he didnât âknow exactly what happenedâ. OGE, he added, is working on a security framework and âlooking at the thickness of the pipeline in a way that is supposed to provide more securityâ. Despite such concerns, CCUS has continued to receive strong political backing. US President Donald Trump, for example, cut subsidies for other green technologies but expanded support for CCUS, while India is preparing CCUS subsidies. âThe need for CCS is broadly recognised at the political level,â said Shellâs CCS general manager Kelly Ripley. Oil and gas giant Shell is launching CCUS projects â especially in North America and northwest Europe â she added, and is âdoing a lot of learning from this political and regulatory perspective and also hoping to bring other countries on the same journey with usâ. The post Industry says carbon capture still an expensive last resort to cut emissions appeared first on Climate Home News.