Orsted entered into a decade-long agreement to sell Equinor carbon dioxide removal (CDR) credits amounting to 330,000 tons of CO2.
This is a component of Orsted’s Kalundborg CO2 Hub project, which aims to capture 430,000 tons of biogenic CO2 annually from its biomass-fired combined heat and power (CHP) plants by 2026.
The captured CO2 will come from sustainable biomass and will be permanently stored beneath the North Sea’s seabed, contributing to negative emissions by directly removing CO2 from the atmosphere.
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The ‘Ørsted Kalundborg CO2 Hub’ is being developed with the help of CDR credits, since biomass-based carbon capture and storage is still in its initial stage.
Ole Thomsen, the Senior Vice President and head of Orsted’s Bioenergy business said, “Equinor shares Ørsted’s commitment to maturing carbon capture and storage technologies.”
He added, “We already have a partnership with Equinor and Nordsøfonden to explore the possibility of storing CO2 in the subsurface, and we’re pleased to expand the collaboration through this agreement on the sale of CDR credits.”
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This agreement also supports Equinor’s plan to reduce its net scope 1 and 2 greenhouse gas emissions by 50% by 2030, compared to 2015.
Equinor also estimates that at least 90% of this decrease will come from absolute emissions reductions, with no more than 10% coming from CDR credits.