Aker Solutions' Carbon-capture Tech Gets Green Light

Wednesday, April 29, 2020

Norwegian engineering company Aker Solutions has had its carbon-capture technology approved for use at Norcem's cement plant in Brevik, it said on Wednesday.

Carbon capture and storage (CCS) is widely viewed as a crucial technology to achieve emission reductions from the likes of the cement industry, which accounts for about 7% of total CO2 emissions, according to the International Energy Agency.

Aker Solutions' post-combustion technology will be used to capture and liquefy 400,000 tonnes of CO2 a year at the plant operated by Norcem, which is owned by Germany's HeidelbergCement, the Norwegian company said.

The Brevik plan is part of Norway's larger efforts to capture CO2 emissions at several onshore installations and bury them under the Norwegian continental shelf seabed.

Norway's Equinor, meanwhile, is developing offshore CO2 storage in partnership with Total and Shell, with a final investment decision expected by the end of this year.

Norway is planning to fund part of the preliminary cost of about 10 billion crowns ($963 million) for the carbon capture and storage chain, which could help the country to meet its own targets for CO2 reduction.

 ($1 = 10.3814 Norwegian crowns) 

(Reporting by Nerijus Adomaitis Editing by David Goodman)

Categories: Technology Engineering Industry News Activity Europe CO2 Decarbonization

Related Stories

DNV Sees Clean Hydrogen Growing 100-Fold by 2060

Europe's Offshore Wind Turbine Prices Jump 40-45% as Supply Tightens

Baker Hughes, Strohm Partner On UltraDeepwater Flowlines and Risers

Current News

Trey Stolz Named as Guice Offshore CFO

Hard-to-Abate Reality Check: DNV on CCS Growth, Costs, and the Policy Gap

Konecranes to Supply Two Cranes for Norwegian Oil Industry Facility

Longitude to Integrate SynergenOG Following ABL Group Acquisition

Subscribe for OE Digital E‑News