CapturePoint and Energy Transfer joined hands to develop a joint carbon capture and permanent deep storage project in Louisiana. CapturePoint LLC and its affiliate CapturePoint Solutions LLC revised a letter of intent with an affiliate of Energy Transfer.
In addition to plans to develop a carbon capture and storage (CCS) plant, the companies are collaborating on an agreement to offset CO2 from Energy Transfer’s natural gas treating facilities in Haynesville.
The redrafted Letter of Intent also sets the ground rules for both organisations to collaborate regarding the carbon capture and storage of additional CO2 emitted from other facilities operated by Energy Transfer in Louisiana.
The Letter of Intent and the CO2 Offtake Agreement dictate that the CO2 emitted from Energy Transfer’s Haynesville natural gas facilities will get directed to Capture Point’s Central Louisiana Regional Carbon Storage Hub (CENLA Hub). The terms also include a provided right to Energy Transfer to be part of a joint venture that will own and run the CENLA Hub.
The storage hub owned by CapturePoint is among the most extensive onshore underground carbon storage facilities in the United States. The facility can permanently secure millions of tons of carbon emissions annually.
According to the results of a recent test from the CENLA Hub, the storage hub’s capacity is several million tons of CO2. Geology facilitates this capacity and helps permanently and safely sequester tons of emissions.
The two organisations have established the limit of storing CO2 at the CENLA in the agreement. The capacity is decided at 2 million tons of CO2 emissions annually.
The Louisiana Department of Natural Resources is currently reviewing CapturePoint’s permit applications for CENLA Hub in Vernon and Rapides Parishes. The verdict of the review is awaited.