Shell, Equinor, TotalEnergies issue first Northern Lights CO2 storage certificates
The Northern Lights joint venture (JV), encompassing oil majors Shell, Equinor, and TotalEnergies, has issued the first storage certificates for CO2 permanently stored in the Aurora reservoir in the North Sea, documenting the quantities of CO2 transported and stored.

The first CO2 volumes were transported in August through the 100-kilometer pipeline and injected into the Aurora offshore reservoir 2,600 meters below the North Sea seabed offshore Norway. Following the start of the CO2 injection, Northern Lights has issued the first set of storage certificates documenting that the CO2 volumes captured at Heidelberg Materials’ cement factory in Brevik have been transported and stored permanently in the reservoir.

“Credible carbon accounting is essential to the integrity of the emerging CCS industry. It includes a precise tracking of CO₂ volumes transported and stored, as well as emissions arising across the value chain. The CO₂ accounting and measurement procedures are described in Northern Lights’ Monitoring, Reporting and Verification (MRV). Data is recorded in our digital system, which is designed as ledger for
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