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Norway's Northern Lights CCS Project starts with the first CO2 injection

Norway's Northern Lights CCS Project starts with the first CO2 injection

Shell, Equinor, and TotalEnergies announced on Monday that the first volumes of CO2 have been injected into and stored in Norway's Northern Lights Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) Project, marking the beginning of operations.

Companies said that the CO2 was being stored in a 2,600 meter reservoir (8,530 feet) below seabed. This marks a significant milestone for CCS.

In a press release, Anders Opedal said that the industry of carbon capture transport and storage is scalable.

The facility is a part of the heavily-subventioned Longship carbon storage and capture project in Norway, which aims to commercialise CCS to reduce CO2 emission levels. This is especially important for sectors that are dependent on fossil fuels and difficult to decarbonise. The CO2 that is now being stored was originally shipped from Heidelberg Materials' Brevik cement plant in southern Norway. It was first unloaded into tanks onshore, then sent via a 100-kilometer pipeline to the storage facility.

Phase 1 of Northern Lights is now complete. It can inject 37,5 million metric tonnes of CO2 in a period of 25 years, or 1,5 million tons each year. The project has been fully booked. Partners also agreed to invest $743.93 million in a second phase that targets an extra 3.5 million tonnes a year.

(source: Reuters)