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Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Intro
  • Contents
  • Contributors' Biographies
  • List of Abbreviations
  • Table of Cases
  • Table of Legislation
  • Introduction
  • 1. Geological Factors for Legislation to Enable and Regulate Storage of Carbon Dioxide in the Deep Subsurface
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Outline of CCS, Similarities to and Differences from Established Subsurface Industries
  • III. Concepts of Subsurface Zoning
  • IV. Concepts of Injection and Storage
  • V. Guidance on Storage Sites and Monitoring Zones
  • VI. CO2 Injection
  • VII. Enhanced Oil Recovery
  • VIII. Storage Liability
  • IX. Progress and Outlook for CCS and Paris 2015
  • X. Summary
  • 2. Implementation of the Directive on the Geological Storage of Carbon Dioxide
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Details of the EU Legislation
  • III. Beyond the Legislation
  • IV. Conclusions
  • 3. The CCS Directive: Did it Stifle the Technology in Europe?
  • I. Introduction
  • II. The Legislative History, The Public Debate and Collingridge-What a Dilemma
  • III. Risk Management and the CCS Directive
  • IV. Conclusion
  • 4. Germany: A Country without CCS
  • I. Obligation to Allow CO2 Storage?
  • II. Limitation to Pilot Projects
  • III. The Elaboration of the CO2 Storage Act of 2012
  • IV. The German Act and the Land Legislation
  • V. The Actual Situation and Discussion of CCS in Germany
  • VI. Reasons for the German Rejection of CCS Technology
  • VII. Concluding Remarks
  • 5. Public Participation in UK CCS Planning and Consent Procedures
  • I. Introduction
  • II. CCS in the UK Planning Regime
  • III. Public Participation and National Policy Statements
  • IV. Public Participation at the Application and Project Stages
  • V. Conclusion
  • 6. CCS in the US Climate Change Policy Context
  • I. Introduction
  • II. CCS/U Technologies
  • III. The Current Climate Policy Context and CCS/U
  • IV. The Future Climate Policy Context and CCS/U.
  • V. Conclusion
  • 7. Confronting the Bleak Economics of CCS in the United States
  • I. The Economics of Low-Carbon Electricity
  • II. Current and Future US Policies for Promoting CCS
  • III. Conclusion
  • 8. Gaining Economic Credit for CCS in the United States
  • I. Introduction
  • II. National Level Credit
  • III. State and Regional Credits
  • IV. Voluntary Carbon Credit Market
  • V. Conclusion
  • 9. The Legal Framework for Carbon Capture and Storage in Canada
  • I. Authority-Canada's Constitutional Structure
  • II. The Regulation of GHG Emissions
  • III. Geophysical Survey and GHG Emissions Sources
  • IV. Subsurface Property Rights
  • V. The Regulatory Framework
  • VI. The Liability Framework
  • VII. Conclusions
  • 10. Pore Space Ownership in Western Canada
  • I. The Common Law Rules
  • II. Alberta
  • III. British Columbia
  • IV. Saskatchewan
  • V. Conclusions
  • 11. The Regulation of Underground Storage of Greenhouse Gases in Australia
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Overview of Australia's GHG Storage Legislation
  • III. Long-term Liability
  • IV. Conclusion
  • 12. Tenure, Title and Property in Geological Storage of Greenhouse Gas in Australia
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Land Tenure
  • III. Title
  • IV. Property
  • V. Conclusion
  • 13. Transportation of Carbon Dioxide in the European Union: Some Legal Issues
  • I. Introduction
  • II. Transporting CO2 Via Pipelines
  • III. Transport of CO2 by Ship
  • IV. Cross-border Transportation of CO2 Offshore
  • V. Trans-European Networks
  • VI. Conclusion
  • 14. Regulation of Carbon Dioxide Pipelines: The US Experience and a View to the Future
  • I. Introduction: A Word of Context
  • II. CO2-based Enhanced Oil Recovery and the role of CO2 Pipelines
  • III. The Current Regulatory Framework for CO2 Pipelines in the United States
  • IV. Related Issues: Pipeline Standards
  • Control of Product Specifications.
  • And Capacity Allocation
  • V. Conclusion
  • 15. Long-Term Liability and CCS
  • I. The Challenge
  • II. Emergence of the CCS-Specific Regime
  • III. Constraints and Challenges
  • IV. Conclusions and the Way Forward
  • 16. Carbon Capture and Storage: Commercial Arrangements for Managing Liability Risks
  • I. Introduction: the Complexities of CCS and the Many Links in the CCS Chain
  • II. Key Roles and Risks in a CCS Project
  • III. Categories of Risks/Liabilities Associated with a CCS Project, and How Legal Liability Risks May Arise in Practice
  • IV. Mechanisms for Apportioning Liability Risks
  • V. Incentivising CCS-Liability Considerations
  • 17. No Visible Means of Legal Support: China's CCS Regime
  • I. Introduction: Whither Law?
  • II. Environmental Law in China
  • III. Carbon Capture and Storage and China
  • IV. The Problem of Law and the Environment in China
  • V. Conclusion
  • Pulling the Threads Together
  • I. The Context of Legal Development
  • II. Emergence of CCS-Specific Legislation
  • III. Future Perspectives for Regulation
  • Index.