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Denmark's North Sea: From Oil to Carbon Capture
30 Jan
Summary
- Old oil fields are being repurposed for massive carbon storage.
- Greensand Future aims to store millions of tonnes of CO2 annually.
- CCS technology is crucial for net-zero goals but faces criticism.

Offshore platforms 250km from Denmark's west coast are being repurposed for a significant carbon storage project. The Greensand Future initiative will inject thousands of tonnes of climate-warming CO2 into a nearly depleted oilfield.
This project, backed by Ineos and other partners, is set to become the EU's first large-scale offshore CO2 storage site. It plans to store approximately 400,000 tonnes of CO2 this year, with ambitions to reach eight million tonnes annually by 2030.
Both the IPCC and IEA highlight carbon capture and storage (CCS) as vital tools for limiting global warming, alongside emissions cuts. The EU also considers CCS necessary for achieving its 2050 net-zero targets.




