Abstract
Many CCS research projects are confined to lab or pilot scale, others restrict themselves to one or two fields of interest such as capture or storage. The first Dutch national R&D programme on CCS (CATO) and its successor CATO2 have been organized as integrated, demand-driven research programmes with a clear focus on the support of pilot projects and demonstration projects at industrial scale in addition to fundamental research. The integration in CATO-2 provided additional value to our stakeholders. Such value creation is most prominent within the context of large integrated demonstration projects such as the ROAD project but is evident in most of our fundamental work too. This paper provides a brief overview of the results obtained in the CATO-2 programme in the past five year with a focus on the value of integration.
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