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Australian Energy Producers Journal Australian Energy Producers Journal Society
Journal of Australian Energy Producers
RESEARCH ARTICLE (Non peer reviewed)

Angel CCS project – decarbonising the hard-to-abate industries of WA

Dmitry Kosyak A *
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Woodside Energy Ltd, 11 Mount Street, Perth, WA 6000, Australia.




Dmitry Kosyak is an Energy professional with nearly 20 years of experience. He joined Woodside in 2012 and progressed through a broad range of engineering and leadership roles in production optimisation, business process improvement and pre-FEED and commercialisation studies. Since 2020 Dmitry has been leading feasibility studies for various CCS opportunities and in 2022 was appointed as Development Manager of Angel CCS Project. Prior to joining Woodside, he worked on the Sakhalin-II Project, the largest integrated Oil and Gas project in Russia, overseeing start-up, commissioning and operations. Dmitry is Bachelor (Hon) of Chemical Engineering from Moscow State University of Oil and Gas.

* Correspondence to: Dmitry.kosyak@woodside.com

Australian Energy Producers Journal 64 S170-S172 https://doi.org/10.1071/EP23208
Accepted: 8 April 2024  Published: 16 May 2024

© 2024 The Author(s) (or their employer(s)). Published by CSIRO Publishing on behalf of Australian Energy Producers.

Abstract

The Angel CCS Project is a proposed large-scale multi-user carbon capture and storage (CCS) hub located near Karratha, WA. It is being progressed by the Angel CCS Joint Venture (JV). Angel CCS is ideally located to aggregate emissions from existing sources in the Pilbara region and has the potential to facilitate the development of new lower-carbon industries, such as the production of hydrogen and ammonia, by providing a local solution for emissions. The JV has been awarded greenhouse gas assessment permit G-10-AP, located in the Northern Carnarvon Basin off the north-western coast of Western Australia and is now assessing the technical, regulatory and commercial feasibility of aggregating emissions from existing and potential future facilities and the geological storage of carbon dioxide in the permit area. Notionally, the Angel CCS project is expected to be able to handle up to 5 Mtpa. The proposed project could be the first large scale CCS hub with offshore storage in Australia and potentially one of the largest CCS hubs in the Asia Pacific. The paper provides an overview of the Angel CCS Project, outlines key enabling factors for CCS Hub developments, and explains the key considerations that informed the development concept.

Keywords: carbon capture and storage, CCS, CCS hub, decarbonisation, depleted reservoir, energy transition, GHG, greenhouse gas.

Biographies

EP23208_B1.gif

Dmitry Kosyak is an Energy professional with nearly 20 years of experience. He joined Woodside in 2012 and progressed through a broad range of engineering and leadership roles in production optimisation, business process improvement and pre-FEED and commercialisation studies. Since 2020 Dmitry has been leading feasibility studies for various CCS opportunities and in 2022 was appointed as Development Manager of Angel CCS Project. Prior to joining Woodside, he worked on the Sakhalin-II Project, the largest integrated Oil and Gas project in Russia, overseeing start-up, commissioning and operations. Dmitry is Bachelor (Hon) of Chemical Engineering from Moscow State University of Oil and Gas.

Reference

IPCC (2022) Summary for Policymakers. In ‘Climate Change 2022: Mitigation of Climate Change. Contribution of Working Group III to the Sixth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’. (Eds PR Shukla, J Skea, R Slade, A Al Khourdajie, R van Diemen, D McCollum, M Pathak, S Some, P Vyas, R Fradera, M Belkacemi, A Hasija, G Lisboa, S Luz, J Malley) (Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, UK and New York, NY, USA)