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Historic CO2 ‘graveyard’ launches in Norway to fight climate change

Carbon capture and storage (CCS) technology has been listed as a climate tool by the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and the International Energy Agency (IEA), especially for reducing the CO2 footprint of industries like cement and steel that are difficult to decarbonise

The Northern Lights consortium, which runs the site, announced Monday that the first-ever CO2 injection into the North Sea seabed has been completed by the world’s first commercial service providing carbon storage off the coast of Norway.

Under the direction of the oil giants Equinor, Shell, and TotalEnergies, Northern Lights transports and buryes CO2 that has been caught at smokestacks throughout Europe.

The goal is to stop the emissions from entering the atmosphere, which will assist to slow down climate change.

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“We now injected and stored the very first CO2 safely in the reservoir,” Northern Lights’ managing director Tim Heijn said in a statement.

“Our ships, facilities and wells are now in operation.”

In concrete terms, after the CO2 is captured, it is liquified and transported by ship to the Oygarden terminal near Bergen on Norway’s western coast.

It is then transferred into large tanks before being injected through a 110-kilometre (68-mile) pipeline into the seabed, at a depth of around 2.6 kilometres, for permanent storage.

Carbon capture and storage (CCS) technology has been listed as a climate tool by the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and the International Energy Agency (IEA), especially for reducing the CO2 footprint of industries like cement and steel that are difficult to decarbonise.

The first CO2 injection into the Northern Lights geological reservoir was from Germany’s Heidelberg Materials cement plant in Brevik in southeastern Norway.

But CCS technology is complex and costly.

Without financial assistance, it is currently more profitable for industries to purchase “pollution permits” on the European carbon market than to pay for capturing, transporting and storing their CO2.

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Northern Lights has so far signed just three commercial contracts in Europe.

One is with a Yara ammonia plant in the Netherlands, another with two of Orsted’s biofuel plants in Denmark, and the third with a Stockholm Exergi thermal power plant in Sweden.

Largely financed by the Norwegian state, Northern Lights has an annual CO2 storage capacity of 1.5 million tonnes, which is expected to increase to five million tonnes by the end of the decade.

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