A significant milestone has been achieved in carbon capture and storage (CCS) technology. Denmark has approved the first full-scale CCS project in the EU, known as Greensand Future. This project, led by INEOS in partnership with Harbour Energy and Nordsøfonden, aims to store carbon dioxide and contribute to climate change mitigation efforts. The project is expected to begin operations in late 2025 or early 2026, reports INEOS.
Initiating Storage Operations
INEOS, the day-to-day operator, of ‘Greensand Future’ and its partners, Harbour Energy, and Nordsøfonden has today announced the Final Investment Decision (FID) to safely and permanently store carbon dioxide from Danish emitters in a depleted oil field in the Danish North Sea.
To initiate storage operations into the INEOS-operated Nini field in the Danish North Sea at the end of 2025/early 2026, ‘Greensand Future’ will become the EU’s first operational CO2 storage facility intended to mitigate climate change. The FID paves the way for expected investments of more than $150m across the Greensand CCS value chain to scale storage capacity.
Sir Jim Ratcliffe Chairman of INEOS said “This is a breakthrough for Carbon Capture and Storage. Greensand Future will be the first CO2 storage facility in operation in the EU supporting both Danish and EU’s climate objectives.”
Greensand Future is a full industrial CCS value chain built on a scalable platform. This platform allows for the gradual expansion of storage capacity as CO2 volumes increase. It is directly applicable to other onshore and offshore storage projects, contributing to the much-needed global acceleration of CCS deployment.
Mads Gade, Head of Denmark, INEOS Energy said: “With Greensand Future and the establishment of the full value chain we are sending an important message to the Danish and European emitters currently considering large-scale capture projects, that it can be done.”
Increasing Capacity
The European Commission has estimated that the European Union will need to establish a carbon storage capacity of 250 million tonnes of CO2 per year by 2040 to achieve the objectives of the Paris Agreement. CCS is also considered a key technology in reaching the Danish 2045 net-zero targets.
The CO2 in the first phase of Greensand Future will be captured and liquified at Danish biomethane production plants, transported to the port of Esbjerg, and then shipped by Royal Wagenborg to the Nini field in the Danish North Sea for safe and permanent storage.
Last year, on March 8th, 2023, the INEOS-led pilot Project Greensand conducted the world’s first cross-border offshore CO2 storage intended to mitigate climate change as His Majesty King Frederik of Denmark officially initiated the first injection of CO2 into the Nini field during the pilot phase of Project Greensand.
Mads Gade, Head of Denmark, INEOS Energy says “Last year we were the first in the world to succeed in developing a value chain for safe and efficient capture, transport and storage of CO2 across national borders. Now we are proud to take the next step, building on the learnings from the pilot and aiming to deliver a fully operational commercial project by end 2025/early 2026”.
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Source: INEOS