4.7 Article

China?s pathway to carbon neutrality for the iron and steel industry

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2022.102574

Keywords

Carbon neutrality; Iron and steel industry; Technology innovation

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [72140001]

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As a hard-to-abate sector, the iron and steel industry is responsible for 22% of China's total carbon emissions. To achieve China's carbon peaking and neutrality target, it is crucial to accelerate the application of breakthrough technologies such as carbon capture and storage (CCS) and hydrogen-based steel-making. By combining conventional strategies with net-zero emission technologies, approximately 80-90% emission reduction can be achieved. The future reduction potential of carbon emissions will be influenced by the decarbonization of power systems and the diffusion rate of innovative technologies. Acting sooner and faster is essential to achieve carbon neutrality.
As a hard-to-abate sector, the iron and steel industry is responsible for 22% of China's total carbon emissions and therefore plays a crucial role in achieving China's carbon peaking and neutrality target. Nearly 90% of China's iron and steel output is produced with coal-based blast furnaces, which results in high carbon emission intensity. To peak China's carbon emissions and achieve the carbon neutrality target, it is essential to accelerate the application of breakthrough technologies such as carbon capture and storage (CCS) and hydrogen-based steel-making. This paper estimates the future CO2 emissions from China's iron and steel industry in pathways that consider the influence of different technology portfolios, technology maturity, decarbonization of power systems, and future steel production output. The results show that using currently available technology, China's iron and steel industry can reduce CO2 emissions by more than 50%. However, it cannot achieve the neutrality target without using innovative technologies. By combining conventional strategies with net-zero emission technologies such as CCS and hydrogen metallurgy, approximately 80-90% emission reduction can be achieved, thus leading to a carbon neutrality pathway, which can meet the 1.5? targets of the carbon budget limit either. In the future, carbon emissions' reduction potential will be influenced by the decarbonization of power systems and the diffusion rate of innovative technologies. To achieve carbon neutrality, it is essential to act sooner and faster.

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