The first CO₂ volumes have now been transported through the 100-kilometre pipeline and injected into the Aurora reservoir 2,600 meters below the seabed of the Norwegian North Sea. 

“We have reached an exciting milestone: We now injected and stored the very first CO₂ safely in the reservoir. Our ships, facilities and wells are now in operation” says Tim Heijn, Managing Director of Northern Lights JV.   

Northern Lights will transport and store CO₂ from Norway during the remainder of 2025 with CO2 volumes from Denmark and the Netherlands expected to be added in 2026.  

Northern Lights JV is a registered, incorporated General Partnership with Shared Liability (DA) owned by Equinor, TotalEnergies and Shell.

Commercially based investment for expansion of Northern Lights
In March this year Northern Lights made the final investment decision for the expansion project which will increase transport and storage capacity from 1.5 million tonnes CO₂ per year to a minimum of 5 million tonnes CO₂ per year, following the signing of a commercial agreement with Stockholm Exergi. The expansion is enabled by a grant from the Connecting Europe Facility for Energy (CEF Energy) funding scheme. 

The expansion leverages existing infrastructure and includes additional onshore storage tanks, pumps, a new jetty, injection wells, and more CO₂ transport ships to enable an increased injection rate and volume. 

“We are excited to continue building additional capacity following the positive investment decision for the second phase” says Tim Heijn. 

 

About Northern Lights 

  • Northern Lights offers CO₂ transport and storage as a service.  
  • Our mission is to enable the reduction and removal of industrial emissions in Europe. 
  • Liquefied CO₂ from capture sites is shipped to our onshore receiving terminal in western Norway, before transported by pipeline for permanent storage in a reservoir 2,600 meters under the seabed. 
  • Northern Lights is the first company to offer commercial CCS services. 
  • The first phase of Northern Lights is part of Longship, the Norwegian Government’s full-scale carbon capture and storage project. 
  • Northern Lights will transport and store CO₂ from two Norwegian industries; Heidelberg Materials’ cement factory in Brevik and the Hafslund Celsio’ waste-to-energy plant in Oslo. 
  • In addition, the Northern Lights JV has signed commercial agreements with Yara in the Netherlands, Ørsted in Denmark, and Stockholm Exergi in Sweden.