Equinor, Var Energi depart Barents Blue H2, CCS project

  • : Emissions, Fertilizers, Hydrogen, Natural gas
  • 23/02/01

Norway's state-controlled Equinor and independent Var Energi have left the planned blue ammonia Barents Blue project and its linked carbon capture and storage (CCS) development in northern Norway, and will be replaced in the former by Spanish fertiliser producer Fertiberia.

The agreement between Equinor, Var Energi and operator Horisont Energi expired on 31 January. Horisont has now entered a co-operation agreement on Barents Blue with Fertiberia, aiming at a full partnership from 1 April, resulting in a 50pc share for each company. Fertiberia plans to be net zero by 2035.

Equinor and Var Energi have also pulled out of the planned Polaris CO2 storage site, which is linked to the Barents Blue development. Polaris, in the Barents Sea offshore northern Norway, will store the carbon captured during the ammonia production process. The site's potential storage capacity of 100mn t means it could permanently store CO2 from other sources. Horisont will "invite new partners into the Polaris CO2 storage licence, including a qualified operator," it said today. It plans to submit a development plan with a new licence group.

The Norwegian ministry of petroleum and economy awarded a CO2 storage licence to Polaris in April 2022.

Var Energi is still seeking "a comprehensive gas export solution" for Barents Sea resources, it said today.

"Development of the proven [gas] resources in the region, including Goliat, Alke and Lupa, will require an export solution with greater capacity than what we deem realistic within the scope of the project," Var Energi said. It will continue to explore and develop in the Barents Sea, it added.

Equinor said it "remains positive to explore gas supply solutions from Hammerfest LNG to the Barents Blue project following the changes in the partnership."

Barents Blue won a grant of 482mn Norwegian kroner ($48.5mn) from the EU, under its important projects of common European interest (IPCEI) scheme. The funding is unaffected by the changes in the consortium, Horisont said.

Fertiberia said the Barents Blue project, in Finnmark, the northernmost region of Norway, will be largest clean ammonia production plant in Europe. The project will produce 1mn t/yr of blue ammonia when it comes online. The companies previously said it would start in 2026, and were unavailable to comment if this had changed with the new partners.

Analysis by Argus estimated the project would need carbon prices at a minimum of $84/t to be viable unless the developers are able to fetch a premium for their low-carbon blue ammonia over the market price for conventional grey ammonia. The price of EU ETS allowances for delivery in December 2023 averaged €82.94/t CO2e ($90.48/t CO2e) over the past month.

Equinor advances Belgium Project

Separately, Equinor said it is progressing with its carbon capture-enabled 1GW/yr hydrogen project in Belgium with utility Engie. The partners completed a feasibility study on building the plant at Engie's site near Ghent and have now signed an agreement to take the project forward and select design concepts in 2023. A final investment decision is yet to be made.

More than 20 potential hydrogen buyers expressed interest in the H2BE project last year, Equinor said.


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24/04/24

Norway-German H2 pipeline hinges on demand: Equinor

Norway-German H2 pipeline hinges on demand: Equinor

London, 24 April (Argus) — Norway and Germany have renewed a commitment to the idea of a hydrogen pipeline, but Norwegian state-owned Equinor expects the link will come in a secondary stage of development as it is focused on hydrogen production in mainland Europe as a first step. Equinor plans to take a final investment decision in late 2025 on its 210,000 t/yr Eemshaven low-carbon hydrogen plant in the Netherlands, the company's director of H2 northwest Europe Henrik Solgaard Andersen said at the Hydrogen and Fuel Cells conference in Hanover. Equinor hopes the project will supply German buyers that participate in the country's carbon contracts for difference (CfD) auctions, which are designed to help large industry decarbonise, Andersen said. Equinor has entered the final phase of studies for the plant. The facility would reform natural gas from the Norwegian offshore to hydrogen with carbon capture and storage (CCS). Undertaking this in the Netherlands means existing pipelines can be used to carry the gas from Norway rather than having to build new links. Equinor sees this as its most mature hydrogen project, followed by one near the German port of Rostock , and one near Ghent in Belgium , according to Andersen. These "local European projects" are designed for early market development and "will be the first step," he said. Equinor expects to start large-scale production of hydrogen in Norway with pipeline exports to the continent only when there is a big enough market, he said. "You don't invest in a pipeline €4bn-6bn just for [transporting] a few molecules," he said. "You need to believe in the market." Equinor in early 2023 announced a plan to supply hydrogen from Norway to German utility RWE for use in power plants. But Berlin has shifted its plans for hydrogen power a couple of times since then. It also has ambitions to use hydrogen in sectors like steel, but companies have not yet taken firm investment decisions, meaning there is uncertainty about how much hydrogen demand will materialise and when. A joint government task force working on a Norwegian-German pipeline has identified the first regulatory barriers that need to be addressed, and private infrastructure companies will continue to study the logistics, according to an announcement from Oslo and Berlin. This will build on the positive feasibility study from last year. German gas system operator operator Gascade, which is developing the AquaDuctus North Sea pipeline connection to Germany, and Norwegian state-owned operator Gassco that is developing the Norwegian side, are aiming for a 2030 start date, the companies reaffirmed this week. Gascade has proposed an open access pipeline that would be able to aggregate hydrogen exports from England, Scotland, Norway, Denmark, and North Sea wind farms. By Aidan Lea Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Oman latest to insist that oil, gas is 'here to stay'


24/04/24
24/04/24

Oman latest to insist that oil, gas is 'here to stay'

Muscat, 24 April (Argus) — Omani and Oman-focused energy officials this week joined a growing chorus of voices to reiterate the pivotal role that hydrocarbons have in the energy mix, even as state-owned companies scramble to increase their share of renewables production. Some producers cite the risk of leaving costly, stranded oil and gas assets as renewable energy alternatives become more favoured. "This is a common concern among producers who are focusing on short-term developments to maximize cash flow — [but] if we continue to do that, with the clean energy transition, will we be left with stranded assets in the long-term", state-controlled PDO's technical director Sami Baqi told the Oman Petroleum and Crude Show conference in Muscat this week. "We need to redefine and revamp our operation model to produce in a sustainable manner." "We are in an era where most of the production does not come from the easy oil but comes from difficult oil," Oman's energy ministry undersecretary Mohsin Al Hadhrami said. "It requires more improved and enhanced oil recovery (EOR) type technologies to extract it." Oman is heavily reliant on tertiary extraction technologies like EOR given its maturing asset base and complicated geology. "We know that most of the oil fields [in the region] are maturing and costs are going to escalate, so we need to be mindful of it while discussing cleaner solutions going forward," Hadhrami said. PDO, Oman's largest hydrocarbon producer, aims for 19pc of its output to come from EOR projects by 2025, and has said it is looking at 'cleaner' ways to implement the technology. PDO in November started a pilot project to inject captured CO2 for EOR at its oil reservoirs. Baqi's concerns were echoed by PDO's carbon capture, utilisation and storage (CCUS) manager Nabil Al-Bulushi, who said even solutions like CCUS can be expensive and come with their own challenges. There is a need for a proper ecosystem or regulatory policies to avoid delays in executing such projects, he said. When it comes to challenges associated with commercialising green hydrogen, Saudi state-controlled Aramco's head of upstream Yousef Al-Tahan said higher costs already make hydrogen more expensive than any other energy sources. "Not only should the costs go down, but the market has to be matured to take in the hydrogen," he said. "We also need pipelines and facilities that are able to handle hydrogen, especially when it gets converted to ammonia." Gas here to stay Oman, like many of its neighbors in the Mideast Gulf, insists gas needs to be part of the global journey towards cleaner energies. "Asia-Pacific is still heavily reliant on coal, this is an area where gas can play an important role," Shell Oman's development manager Salim Al Amri said at the event. "I think there is no doubt that gas is here to stay." Oman is a particularly interesting case as it "has moved from a position of gas shortage to surplus", Al Amri said, enabled by key developments in tight gas. "Output from fields like Khazzan and Mabrouk will continue to produce nearly 50pc of output even by 2025, which is indicative of how important tight gas developments are," he said. The Khazzan tight gas field has 10.5 trillion ft³ of recoverable gas reserves. Mabrouk North East is due to reach 500mn ft³/d by mid-2024. But even as natural gas is touted as the transition fuel, executives from major producers like state-owned OQ and PDO warned there are technical risks associated with extracting the fuel, including encountering complex tight reservoirs, water production and difficult geology. By Rithika Krishna Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Australia’s Woodside pledges extra domestic gas in 2025


24/04/24
24/04/24

Australia’s Woodside pledges extra domestic gas in 2025

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US-led carbon initiative misses launch date


24/04/23
24/04/23

US-led carbon initiative misses launch date

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US oil and gas deals slowing after record 1Q: Enverus


24/04/23
24/04/23

US oil and gas deals slowing after record 1Q: Enverus

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