Neptune Energy partners with Sval and Storegga for CO2 storage licence offshore Norway
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2 March 2023
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Neptune Energy
Neptune Energy today
welcomed Sval’s
announcement
regarding an application for a CO2 storage licence in the Norwegian
North Sea. Securing the licence would enable the companies to proceed with
the Trudvang project which has the potential to store up to nine million
tonnes of CO2 per year, equivalent to about 20 per cent of Norway’s
total annual emmissions.
Neptune
Energy’s Global Head of Subsurface, New Energy, Pål Haremo, said: "Trudvang
is a very interesting concept with the potential to store up to 225 million
tonnes of CO2 over the next 25-30 years. Together with our partners,
Sval and Storegga, we have progressed the storage application in record
time.
"The
North Sea has great potential as a hub for carbon storage given the availability
and proximity of existing infrastructure, depleted reservoirs and saline
aquifers. In addition to our CCS projects in Norway, Neptune is working
on potential projects in the Netherlands and UK, as we aim to build a portfolio
for carbon storage linked to our core areas in the North Sea.
“Trudvang
could be a key contributor to Neptune's 2030 goal of storing more carbon
than is emitted from our operations and from use of the oil and gas products
we sell."
The
Trudvang project comprises capture of CO2 by multiple industrial
emitters in Northern Europe and the UK, shipping of liquid CO2
from export terminals to an onshore receiving terminal in the south-west
of Norway and transport via a purpose-built pipeline to the Trudvang location
for injection and permanent storage.
The
Trudvang storage licence is located in the Norwegian North Sea, to the
east of the Sleipner field and about 200 kilometres from the coast. The
storage reservoir is at a depth of approximately 850 metres, in the Utsira
formation.