Carbon capture, utilization and storage processes have been around for half a decade, but are currently gaining momentum.
Some focus on modifying already-standing power as well as industrial plants that work on carbon capture.
Put more succinctly, Deutsche Bank analyst James Hubbard called carbon capture "simple in theory" but "capital intensive and divisive" in reality.
He also noted the company has one of the industry's largest carbon capture positions.
Staphos cited the potential of its carbon capture operations as a long-term reason to be optimistic, even as its more traditional end-market, homebuilding, faces near-term pressure.
Persons:
CCUS, Worley, Wood MacKenzie, Goldman Sachs, Jan Hatzius, Hatzius, James Hubbard, Goldman's Brian Singer, Baker Hughes, Goldman, Ati Modak, hasn't, Stephens, Mike Scialla, Scialla, George Staphos, Staphos, — CNBC's Michael Bloom
Organizations:
Big, International Energy Agency, U.S . Department of Energy, Battelle, Carbon Technologies, Occidental Petroleum, Carbon Engineering, Energy, Deutsche Bank, Wall Street, Occidental Petroleum . Energy, Baker, Occidental, of Energy, Bank of America, Weyerhaeuser, Bloom Energy, CF Industrial, Honeywell, KBR, Linde, Nutrien, Teledyne, Refinitiv
Locations:
Vermont, stoke, Maui, Big Tech, Texas, Louisiana, Carbon Technologies . Texas, Kleberg County, Rio Grande, Denmark, Switzerland, Union, Occidental, Boise, Pacific