Aker Solutions firms up Brevik carbon capture deal

Aker Solutions has secured a contract from Aker Carbon Capture for engineering, procurement and management assistance to realise the CO2 capture plant at Norcem’s cement factory in Brevik, Norway.

The project will start in January 2021, with work completed in 2024.

The contract has a value of about NOK 500 million ($57 million).

Consequently, the plant will become the world’s first large-scale capture plant at a cement producer, capturing some 400,000 metric tons of CO2 annually.

Aker Carbon Capture is the main contractor for engineering, procurement and construction (EPC).

The company is responsible for the delivery to Norcem HeidelbergCement of a complete new facility for capture, intermittent storage and offloading of CO2, with integrated waste-heat recovery. Aker Solutions’ scope includes engineering, procurement and management assistance (EPMa) for the new installation.

Kjetel Digre, CEO of Aker Solutions, said:

“This is a key step for Aker Solutions’ strategy to be the supplier that enables customers and societies to accelerate the transition to more sustainable industry activities. Through close collaboration we will complement Aker Carbon Capture in their role as main contractor and specialists on CCS technology. For the Norcem facility in Brevik, we will contribute with our strong expertise in engineering and project management.”

Aker Solutions expects around 100 employees will work on delivering these services. Specifically, the project includes deliveries from the company’s offices in Fornebu and Mumbai, with most of the work performed in Norway.

The development in Brevik is part of the Norwegian government’s Longship demonstration project to realise the full value chain for carbon capture and storage. Longship also includes the development of new installations for permanent storage in the seabed off the west coast of Norway. On December 17, 2020, Aker Solutions announced contracts of about NOK 1.3 billion for delivering the CO2 receiving facilities Northern Lights, as well as subsea equipment for injecting captured CO2 into a reservoir for permanent storage.

The CO2 captured in Brevik will also be transported to the Northern Lights project for permanent storage.

As a result of Northern Lights, multiple companies across northern Europe now have a real opportunity to remove their CO2 emissions and transform their industries into sustainable businesses.

Source link