Northern Lights
CO₂ Storage Operational – Products Soon to Hit the Market
This milestone marks the launch of the entire value chain—from capture, maritime transport, interim storage, to injection into the final reservoir. Completion of this system is also essential for bringing carbon-reduced cement products to market.
“We have ambitious climate goals for our products, and for the cement industry, carbon capture is absolutely necessary to enable net-zero concrete. This has long been a vision—now it’s a reality. In just a few weeks, the first constructions using evoZero cement will begin. Building-owners and contractors will now have a powerful new tool to build with an even lower climate footprint,” says Vetle Houg, Managing Director of Heidelberg Materials Cement Norway.
Learn more about evoZero cement here.
About Langskip
Langskip is a project for the capture, transport, and storage of CO₂ from industrial sources. It is a Norwegian initiative and the first of its kind in Europe to demonstrate the full-scale value chain for CCS (Carbon Capture and Storage).
CO₂ is captured at Heidelberg Materials’ cement plant in Brevik and at Hafslund Celsio’s waste-to-energy plant in Oslo. It is then transported by ship to a receiving facility in Øygarden, Vestland, operated by Northern Lights—a company jointly owned by Equinor, Shell, and TotalEnergies.

Brevik Fabrikk med blå himmel.

Northern Lights.jpg.
Ruben Soltvedt Northern Lights JV

Northern Lights .
Northern Lights

Brevik Fabrikk med blå himmel.

Northern Lights.jpg.
Ruben Soltvedt Northern Lights JV

Northern Lights .
Northern Lights