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NTNU Energy Transition Podcast

#39 Policy measures to support Direct Air Capture (with Sasha Mackler from the Bipartisan Policy Centre in Washington D.C.)

NTNU Energy Transition Podcast
NTNU Energy Transition Podcast

Sasha Mackler is the director of the Energy Program at the Bipartisan Policy Center - a Washington, DC-based think tank. He has spent over 20 years in this field, including 10 years in the private sector working on carbon capture and biomass fuel supply. Mackler has managed a number of energy policy projects on topics such as tax incentives, federal RD&D, finance, workforce transition, carbon capture and storage, low carbon fuels, cap and trade, climate impacts and adaptation, and geoengineering research.

Policies play a crucial role in defining the environment in which technologies, such as direct air capture (DAC), can thrive or struggle. Several policy measures have been implemented in the United States in recent years to support DAC. In this episode we cover the most important ones. First, we cover 45Q, which is a section of the US Tax Code that supports carbon capture and was enacted in 2008. The second is the Low Carbon Fuel Standard (LCFS) which is a policy measure, initially implemented in California in 2007, which aims to drive the use of clean fuels and includes DAC as a qualifying pathway for decarbonizing fuels. Third we look at the Energy Act from 2020 that authorized new programs for the US Department of Energy to support the demonstration and commercialization of advanced energy technologies, including DAC. Fourth we cover the the Inflation Reduction Act, adopted in August 2022, which provides incentives for carbon capture, utilization, and storage projects.

In this episode, Sasha and Julius discuss how current US policies support DAC, and consider how policymakers in other parts of the world can look to the US for guidance and inspiration.

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The NTNU Energy Transition Podcast aims to function as a knowledge hub  that empowers individuals and organizations in Europe and beyond to  tackle climate change and move our global society toward carbon  neutrality. New episodes every other Thursday. The NTNU Energy  Transition Initiative was established to deliver world-leading research  on energy transition strategies, to achieve the Paris ambitions in an  efficient and realistic way. Every March we organize the NTNU Energy  Conference in Trondheim, Norway. You can find us on Twitter, LinkedIn,  and on our webpage. Please reach out by mail to julius.wesche@ntnu.no.

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