Northern Lights ready to receive CO₂
(UTC)Last modified
The world’s first cross-border CO2 transport and storage facility has been completed and is ready to receive and store CO2.
Northern Lights
- Northern Lights JV is a registered, incorporated General Partnership with Shared Liability (DA), equally owned by Equinor, TotalEnergies and Shell.
- The Northern Lights facility consists of a receiving terminal, injection pipeline and subsea installations.
- Equinor has been in charge of building the onshore plant in Øygarden as well as the offshore facilities on behalf of Northern Lights JV and partners. The budget of this scope is 7.5 billion NOK. This does not include the ships or the CO2 capture plants.
- The first phase of this development of the value chain is 80 per cent funded by the Norwegian state as part of the Longship project.
- Longship is a comprehensive CCS project initiated by the Norwegian government, aiming to demonstrate CO2 capture, transport, and storage at scale.
- Northern Lights, a key part of this initiative, focuses specifically on the transport and storage elements.
- Captured and liquefied CO2 at the customers sites is transported by ship to the onshore receiving terminal at Øygarden.
- From the terminal, CO2 is transported by pipeline for storage in a reservoir 2.600 meters under the seabed in the North Sea.
- The Northern Lights project created ripple effects in 2023 of 1.7 bn NOK in deliveries, over 900 man-years and 1.3 bn NOK in value creation.