In the news this week
Carbon Capture Technology Expo Europe
The World’s Leading International Event For Carbon Capture, Utilisation & Storage
Paper mills will host the launch of the demo for CO2 capture for chemical recovery boilers
A CO2 capture demonstration test will be held at the Niigata Mill and this capture demonstration has been launched by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Ltd. (MHI) and Hokuetsu Corporation. Hokuetsu Corporation is a well-known company and they are one of Japan’s leading paper manufacturers.
The CO2 capture plant for Heidelberg cement factory has been finished by SLB Capturi
A brand-new CCS plant has recently been created, this plant is called the Brevik CCS plant and it will now become part of The Longship CCS project. This is Europe’s first complete value chain which covers the capture, transport and storage of industrial CO2 emissions. Now that it has been completed, the Brevik plant will go into its commission phase and it has been planned that operations will be starting during 2025.
A partnership over a carbon capture plant will occur between Aramco, Carbon Clean and SAMSUNG E&A
A new technology demonstration has been set up, with the intention of deploying Carbon Clean’s novel CycloneCC technology. This technology will be dedicated to capturing CO2 from natural gas turbine exhaust streams which contain an estimated 4% of CO2.
领英推荐
The CCS FEED for Heidelberg Materials facility has been awarded to Fluor
It has been revealed that Fluor has signed a Front-end Engineering and Design (FEED) contract with Heidelberg Materials over the company’s GeZero project. The aim behind this feed is to integrate an industrial-scale carbon capture and storage solution into Heidelberg Material’s cement production facility based in Germany, specifically Geseke.
Hong Kong’s first carbon capture system has been created by CS Tech
Self-development equipment created by CS Tech has the potential to transform industrial CO2 emissions and waste into valuable resources. This is made possible through integrating it with proprietary pressure swing absorption (PSA) technology from the UK.