A proposed 95-mile carbon capture pipeline project has grinded to a stop. Wolf Carbon Solutionsโat least for nowโhas ended its bid for regulatory approval.
Wolf Carbon Solutions told Iowa regulators that it is pulling its application for a pipeline project in eastern Iowa. The project would transport as much as 12 million tons of carbon dioxide annually to a storage facility in Decatur, Illinois.ย
In a Monday morning filing to the Iowa Utilities Commission, it cited uncertainty in its own timeline for securing land.ย
โWhile Wolf has continued to build relationships with landowners and stakeholders interested in the Project, a number of factors have continued to delay Wolfโs ability to proceed with the Project,โ Wolfโs attorney Dennis Puckett of Sullivan & Ward wrote.ย
Wolfโs is the latest carbon dioxide pipeline project put on ice. Last October, Nebraska-based Navigator CO2 Ventures canceled its Heartland Greenway pipeline. And more recently, Iowa-based Summit Carbon Solutions had its pipeline permit application denied by regulators in North Dakota and South Dakota.ย
Wolfโs own application was denied by regulators in Illinois because the company did not have a final agreement in place with Archer-Daniels-Midland or ADM, the company operates the ethanol plants in Cedar Rapids and Clinton and manages the underground sequestration site in Illinois.ย
Anti-pipeline advocate and former state Senate candidate Jessica Wiskus greeted the news with celebration. Wolf said early on that it would not make use of eminent domain for the project. Wiskus was part of the organizing effort to convince landowners in Wolfโs proposed corridor to not sign on to the project.
โWe stood together refusing to sign the easements and so they really didnโt have a pathway to make it to the Mississippi River,โ Wiskus told Iowa Starting Line. โIโm saying this is a victory.โย
In order to lower its carbon footprint, the ethanol industry has been pursuing carbon capture pipeline projects so it can compete with energy with lower carbon emissions.ย
While the project is effectively in limbo, both ADM and Wolf are still in conversations about the future of the pipeline. ADM has said it is still committed to using the Decatur facility for carbon capture.


















