IP/08/324
Brussels, 27 February 2008
“The European Commission is committed to encouraging industry to reduce its CO2 emissions and research plays a vital role in that”, said European Science and Research Commissioner, Janez Potočnik. “The European Steel Technology Platform and the work of the ULCOS programme are good examples of an industry working to develop appropriate technologies to maintain its future competitiveness."
Michel Wurth, chairman of ESTEP’s Steering Committee said “This important decision shows that the European steel industry is strongly committed to making its contribution to the fight against climate change and the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions. In addition, it demonstrates that it is capable of living up to this responsibility and at the same time seeking to improve its competitiveness”.
The European steel industry has cut emissions by 50% over the last 40 years. As carbon-based technologies approach their physical limits with respect to energy efficiency, the steel industry has decided to invest in long term R&D to come up with breakthrough technologies to decrease CO2 emissions in steelmaking even more drastically. It was for this reason that the European Steel Technology Platform was launched, with the support of the European Commission, at the beginning of 2003. ULCOS, carried out by a consortium of 48 European partners, is the most important collaborative project implemented under the umbrella of FP6 and the Research Fund of Coal and Steel (RFCS).
A strategy has been put into place to achieve the challenging objectives of ULCOS that first validates process concepts and then demonstrates at pilot-scale the feasibility of the most promising. Four breakthrough "routes", with the potential to cut emissions by a factor of two or more in the long term have been selected for further research from a possible 80. Following a study looking ahead until 2050, the four selected process candidates will be tested. They each need to be further evaluated in detail with regard to their technological, process, economical and environmental performance.
The so-called ULCOS-II programme, which was given the go-ahead today by the Technology platform, will set up several larger scale pilots to test the most promising medium/long term technologies on an industrial scale. Except when carbon-lean electricity is massively available, all breakthrough routes will need to be coupled with carbon capture and storage (CCS), a concept which will have to be adapted cleverly to the particular features of the sector. The first technology to be evaluated on an industrial scale will be based on the Blast Furnace technology with Top Gas Recycling (TGR-BF) and CCS.
This research will require considerable investment, with a price tag of about 300m€ for the implementation of the TGR-BF route. The outcome of this research will be technology for CO2 capture, transport and storage in steelmaking, thus allowing CO2-free steelmaking for the first time. This technology will be developed in line with EU objectives on CO2 capture and storage and its public acceptance. The European Steel Technology Platform will work closely with the European Zero Emissions Technology Platform, which is also focusing on research into CO2 capture, transport and storage.
At its meeting, the Steering Committee also gave its strong support to
several other large environmental projects such as scale-free and lean-energy
processes, sustainable use of resources, societal impact of development of new
materials, intelligent manufacturing and energy-efficient buildings, working in
tandem with the European Construction Technological Platform (ECTP)
platform.
ESTEP website: