Abstract

Carbon capture, utilization, and storage (CCUS) technology plays a pivotal role in China's "Carbon Peak" and "Carbon Neutrality" goals. This approach offers low-carbon, zero-carbon, and even negative-carbon solutions. This paper employs bibliometric analysis using the Web of Science to comprehensively review global CCUS progress and discuss future development prospects in China. The findings underscore it as a prominent research focus, attracting scholars from both domestic and international arenas. China notably leads the global landscape in terms of research paper output, with the Chinese Academy of Sciences holding a prominent position in total published papers. The research predominantly centers on refining geological storage techniques and optimizing oil and gas recovery rates. Among the CCUS pathways, enhanced oil recovery technology stands out due to its relative maturity and commercial applicability, particularly within the conventional oil and gas reservoirs. The application potential of enhanced gas recovery technology, especially in the Sichuan and Ordos Basins in China, necessitates robust research and demonstration efforts. Within China's current energy landscape, "Blue Hydrogen" emerges as the primary solution for hydrogen production in conjunction with CCUS technology. The underground coal gasification approach holds significant promise as a hydrogen production avenue, albeit with inherent ecological and environmental challenges tied to geological storage that require meticulous consideration. The establishment of effective risk identification and evaluation methodologies for geological storage is imperative. The trajectory ahead involves a strategic convergence of policy, technology, and market dynamics to enhance China's CCUS policy framework, legislative framework, standardization initiatives, and pioneering technological advancements. These collective efforts converge to outline an exclusive development pathway in China. This study assumes a pivotal role in accelerating CCUS technology research and deployment, enhancing oil and gas recovery efficiency, and ultimately realizing the overarching goals of a "Dual Carbon" future.

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