
Norway has launched a €40 million research and development programme aimed at finding a more cost-effective and efficient technology to capture CO2.
SINTEF, an independent research organisation, The Norwegian University of Science and Technology and Aker Clean Carbon have signed up to collaborate on the eight-year SOLVit programme. The first phase of the effort will receive €4.3 million from the Norwegian government’s CO2 management research programme.
SOLVit aims to develop more efficient and cost-effective chemical processes that can capture CO2 from process industry and fossil-fuel power station emissions.
“We have a clear goal to bring the cost of CO2-capture and cleansing down significantly,” says Jan Roger Bjerkestrand, chief executive of Aker Clean Carbon. “The aim is to come up with a process facility for CO2-capture that can operate on half the energy consumption of today’s processes.”
To carry out the work, the programme will construct a new €5.3 million laboratory at Tiller in Trondheim in northern Norway. The unique test centre will include a 30 m tower and a 25 m processing column.
The project will also develop a mobile capture facility, which will be large enough to process part of the emission from actual power stations and industrial facilities for periods of a few months.
“Results from the development research in the new laboratory in Trondheim will be tried out in test centres and hopefully also in full-scale facilities already in the first phase of the programme,” says SINTEF chief executive Unni Steinsmo.
For further information:
www.sintef.com
www.akercleancarbon.com/
www.ntnu.no/english/