Close Menu
  • Home
  • Maritime
  • Offshore
  • Port
  • Oil & Gas
  • Energy
  • Technology
  • Incidents
  • Environment
  • Events
    • Maritime
    • Offshore
    • Oil & Gas
    • Energy
  • Advertising
  • Contact
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram LinkedIn
Trending
  • Houthis Provide FAQs On How Ships Can Avoid Becoming Their Target In The Red Sea
  • how owners challenge the design process
  • Oil Tanker & Cargo Ship Catches Fire, Killing Captain & Injuring 2 Crew Members
  • Jiangsu Dajin Heavy Industry bags order for six AHTS vessels
  • Fresh gas storage license for Snam’s subsidiary in East Irish Sea fueling UK’s hydrogen dreams
  • Asian Nations Battle For Shipbuilding Share
  • Seacontractors revealed as buyer of DOF anchor handler pair
  • LNG-powered Star Princess wraps up sea trials
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram LinkedIn
Maritime247.comMaritime247.com
  • Home
  • Maritime
  • Offshore
  • Port
  • Oil & Gas
  • Energy
  • Tech
  • Incidents
  • Environment
  • Events
    • Maritime
    • Oil & Gas
    • Offshore
    • Energy
  • Advertising
Maritime247.comMaritime247.com
Home»Offshore»The Gulf of America Can Lead in Carbon Storage, If Washington Acts
Offshore

The Gulf of America Can Lead in Carbon Storage, If Washington Acts

August 15, 2025
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email

The United States Must Act Now to Lead in Offshore Carbon Capture and Storage

The United States has everything it needs to lead in offshore carbon capture and storage (CCS), except the rules to make it happen.

Nearly four years ago, Congress gave the Department of the Interior authority to oversee offshore carbon sequestration. The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA) of 2021 amended the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act (OCSLA) to authorize competitive leasing and regulation of carbon dioxide injection into subsea formations on the U.S. Outer Continental Shelf (OCS). The law required Interior to issue implementing regulations by November 2022.

That deadline has come and gone. Today, there’s still no proposed rule, and each month without action makes it harder for U.S. companies to compete with early movers overseas.

Global Momentum in Offshore CCS

Around the world, offshore CCS is shifting from concept to commercial reality. In the North Sea, Southeast Asia, and Australia, full-scale projects are being licensed, built, and prepared for decades of safe operation. BloombergNEF projects global carbon capture capacity will increase sixfold by 2030. DNV forecasts $80 billion in cumulative CCS investment over the coming decade.

The U.S. should be leading this charge. Instead, we’re watching competitors move forward while we remain stuck in neutral. Every year of regulatory delay is a year of lost investment, lost technology leadership, and lost opportunity for Gulf Coast communities that are ready to work.

Gulf Coast Advantages for Offshore CCS

  • World-class geology — vast deep saline formations with the capacity to store billions of tons of CO₂ securely.
  • Proximity to emitters — major industrial hubs in Texas and Louisiana are just miles from offshore storage potential, reducing transport costs and complexity.
  • A seasoned workforce — thousands of engineers, geoscientists, vessel crews, and offshore safety professionals who already operate in this environment daily.
  • Proven infrastructure — ports, fabrication yards, and shipyards that can pivot from traditional oil and gas to CCS support.

Gulf Coast CCS momentum is building, even without federal rules in place. In April 2025, TGS released the final segment of its comprehensive Mega Gulf Coast Assessment, mapping carbon sequestration potential across coastal Texas, Louisiana, and Mississippi. In September 2024, Viridien completed Phase 2 of its GeoVerse Carbon Storage Screening Study for Texas state waters. Meanwhile, the Offshore Gulf of Mexico Partnership for Carbon Storage (GoMCarb) is actively evaluating offshore storage potential, with final results expected by mid-2026.

Regulatory Certainty is Key

The Gulf’s existing offshore energy expertise is unmatched. The same capabilities that built deepwater platforms and subsea systems can now be deployed to develop the next frontier in decarbonization.

We’re already seeing early private-sector investment. But like all capital-intensive projects, CCS needs regulatory certainty. Without a clear leasing process and permitting pathway from the Department of the Interior, developers and investors are forced to delay or look elsewhere.

  • Durable — providing long-term certainty for investors and operators.
  • Transparent — with clear leasing criteria, timelines, and responsibilities.
  • Flexible — adaptable to new technologies, evolving best practices, and scale-up needs.
  • Grounded in safety and environmental stewardship — leveraging decades of offshore operational experience.

Unlocking Economic and Environmental Benefits

Offshore CCS isn’t just an environmental solution, it’s an economic driver. For Gulf Coast states, it means new contracts for shipyards, fabrication yards, and offshore service providers. For U.S. manufacturers, it means orders for compressors, pipelines, and monitoring systems. For port authorities, it means investments in terminals, dredging, and logistics infrastructure.

It also strengthens America’s energy security by reducing emissions from hard-to-abate sectors like steel, cement, and refining, industries critical to our economy.

Call to Action

The offshore energy sector has not been waiting idly. NOIA members have spent the past several years working through trade associations and technical groups to provide detailed recommendations to BOEM and BSEE. These inputs cover everything from site characterization and reservoir integrity to long-term monitoring and liability frameworks.

We appreciate recent signs of federal support, including comments from Interior leadership acknowledging the importance of this issue. We encourage that momentum to continue because without regulatory clarity, the U.S. risks ceding ground in a critical emerging market.

The U.S. has a unique opportunity to turn one of its most important strategic resources, the Gulf of America, into a world-class hub for carbon management and more broadly a global energy and technology leader for vast activities in the blue economy. Finalizing the offshore carbon storage rules is the key to unlocking that future.

Let’s get it done.

See also  NYK Concludes First Demo of Ammonia-Fueled Tugboat for Commercial Use
Acts America carbon Gulf Lead Storage Washington
Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email

Related Posts

Jiangsu Dajin Heavy Industry bags order for six AHTS vessels

August 17, 2025

Fresh gas storage license for Snam’s subsidiary in East Irish Sea fueling UK’s hydrogen dreams

August 16, 2025

Seacontractors revealed as buyer of DOF anchor handler pair

August 16, 2025
Top Posts

Duties of Bosun (Boatswain) on a Ship

February 1, 2025

China Fights Australia’s Plans to Reclaim Darwin Port Citing U.S. Influence

May 27, 2025

Fire-Stricken Wan Hai 503 Continues to Drift Off Indian Coast as Salvage Efforts Intensify

June 11, 2025

Car Carrier ‘Morning Midas’ Catches Fire with Electric Vehicles Off Alaska

June 5, 2025
Don't Miss
Offshore

DOF secures FPSO installation gig in Africa

March 17, 2025

DOF DOF Secures FPSO Installation Contract in Africa Norwegian offshore vessel owner DOF has been…

TotalEnergies, CMA CGM to Form LNG Bunkering Logistics JV

July 23, 2025

ABS and FLOWRA to Advance Offshore Wind Technologies

July 17, 2025

What Are MARPOL Special Areas?

December 27, 2024

Subscribe to Updates

Your Weekly Dive into Maritime & Energy News.

About Us
About Us

Stay informed with the latest in maritime, offshore, oil & gas, and energy industries. Explore news, trends, and insights shaping the global energy landscape.

For advertising inquiries, contact us at
info@maritime247.com.

Facebook X (Twitter) YouTube LinkedIn
Our Picks

Global Wind Capacity in 2024 Falls Short Despite Reaching a Record

April 24, 2025

Saipem drillship arrives in Egypt to work on Eni’s giant gas field

January 30, 2025

Denmark awards first-ever offshore wind farm life extension permit

June 4, 2025

Subscribe to Updates

Your Weekly Dive into Maritime & Energy News.

© 2025 maritime247.com - All rights reserved.
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Advertising

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.