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Economic Development

First ever carbon capture storage licence bids invited for North Sea

Intense competition anticipated for diverse portfolio of assets to add to developing projects

The areas identified for the first carbon storage licensing round by the North Sea Transition Authority, with the existing licences also highlighted.(Image: North Sea Transition Authority)

The scale of the carbon capture and storage opportunity offered by the North Sea has been outlined as a first-ever licensing round is opened up.

Many of the identified locations sit off the Humber and North East, with two huge projects already licensed as the pioneering net zero technology deployment advances.

They could bring hundreds of engineering jobs while safeguarding thousands in traditional industry on the journey to Net Zero - from the likes of Drax to British Steel.

Read more: Huge carbon capture project launches planning consultation

The North Sea Transition Authority has outlined 13 areas where the geology is right - with saline aquifers and depleted oil and gas fields used to hold harmful emissions currently released by heavy industry into the atmosphere.

V Net Zero and Northern Endurance Partnership - linking Zero Carbon Humber and Net Zero Teesside - already hold the consents, with the latter the government’s identified forerunner. Both are being progressed with the former seeking to clean up the refinery and power cluster at Immingham.

Gas terminals at Grainthorpe, Lincolnshire, Easington, East Yorkshire and on Teesside, would be transformed, expanded and repurposed to reverse the traditional flows, with captured carbon pumped offshore.

East Coast Cluster from Northern Endurance Partnership, uniting Zero Carbon Humber and Net Zero Teesside.(Image: Northern Endurance Partnership)

Others could be shipping destinations, with a carbon trading economy likely to emerge. A total of four carbons storage clusters have been targeted by government by 2030, with hopes of removing 20 to 30 million tonnes of CO2 annually.