Northern
Lights offers CO2 transport and storage as a service. Liquefied CO2 from industrial capture sites is
shipped to an onshore receiving terminal in western Norway, before transported
by pipeline for permanent storage in a reservoir 2,600 meters under the seabed.
The 7,500 cubic meter capacity Northern Pathfinder
follows the Northern
Pioneer, which was delivered in November last year, and will play a
crucial role in safely transporting liquefied CO2 from capture sites in Europe
to the Northern Lights receiving terminal in Øygarden, Norway.
The ship is the second of four sister ships that are
custom designed for CO2 transport. It will be registered in Norway and managed by Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha,
Ltd. (K-Line). Northern Pathfinder and Northern Pioneer will
carry out testing and optimization of their efficiency saving devices on the
repositioning voyage from China to Norway.
Once in
Norway, both ships will start mechanical commissioning activities at the
receiving terminal in Øygarden and in Brevik, where the first operational
customer, Heidelberg Materials, is located. In addition, interface training between ship and shore staff will take
place, to ensure a seamless transition into the operational phase.
Heidelberg Materials’ flagship Brevik CCS project successfully achieved mechanical completion on
schedule, last month, with the company hailing it as “a significant milestone
in the journey to full operation of the CO₂ value chain and to delivering the
first evoZero carbon captured net-zero cement to customers.”