Decarbonisation

Santos, an Australian firm supplying natural gas and its project partner, Beach Energy have secured a grant of AUD15 million from the Carbon Capture Use and Storage Development Fund instituted by the Australian government. The partners won the grant in recognition of their AUD210 million CCS project in Moomba, South Australia.
  • June 18, 2021
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Chart Industries, an American firm that manufactures engineering parts for renewable energy facilities and TECO 2030, an Oslo-based company focused on developing sustainable solutions for the maritime industry are collaborating on a carbon capture project to remove emissions from ships.
  • June 17, 2021
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Drax Group, a renewables company has agreed to a long-term contract with Mitsubishi Heavy Industries for letting them use its carbon capture and storage technology. Drax will use MHI’s carbon capture technology to remove emissions from its power station at Selby, North Yorkshire in the UK. Once operational, this will be the largest execution of negative emissions in a power plant anywhere in the world.
  • June 15, 2021
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Bechtel, a leading company of power plant engineering and construction has partnered with Drax, a renewable energy company to design bioenergy manufacturing plants integrated with carbon capture and storage technology. The focus of the partnership will be to study strategically important sites for new bioenergy plus carbon capture and storage technology (BECCS) plants in North America and Western Europe.
  • June 10, 2021
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Novatek, Russia’s biggest manufacturer of natural gas has recently signed a Memorandum of Understanding with Severstal, a mining and metallurgical exploration company to collaborate on a hydrogen project that will be integrated with a carbon capture and storage technology facility.
  • June 7, 2021
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HeidelbergCement will integrate a carbon capture and storage facility at its cement plant in Slite, Sweden. The CCS facility will allow it to capture approximately 1.8 million tonnes of carbon dioxide each year. This capacity is enough to absorb the plant’s entire emissions, making it the first factory to produce cement while emitting net zero emissions. In addition to employing CCS technology, HeidelbergCement also plans to increase its use of fuels made with biomass. While the CCS facility at HeidelbergCement AG’s factory at Brevik is expected to be operational by 2024, the new one at Slite will be ready for deployment in 2030.
  • June 5, 2021
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