Home Offshore Energy Semco Maritime launches new design for Project Greensand

Semco Maritime launches new design for Project Greensand

Picture: the Siri platform in the North Sea, March 2022 – Photo credit: Project Greensand

The Danish company Semco Maritime has developed a new pumping system design allowing subsea CO2 storage in the North Sea in connection with Project Greensand.

Semco Maritime is introducing a new pumping system design that provides the basis for pumping liquid CO2 in connection with Project Greensand. The mission of the project, in which Semco Maritime engineers and technicians have been involved since January 2021, is to allow CO2 storage in the Danish part of the North Sea and to make a significant contribution to the green transition in Denmark.

Semco Maritime is happy and proud to be part of Project Greensand to store CO2 in the Danish part of the North Sea. For the past 40 years, we have worked to design and develop solutions for offshore operations. With Project Greensand, we have the opportunity to develop our competencies further and use them for the benefit of the climate,says Anders Benfeldt, Senior Vice President of Oil & Gas at Semco Maritime.

Semco Maritime, headquartered in Esbjerg, Denmark, has more than 40 years of experience in offshore operations. Most recently, Semco Maritime designed the structure and locking system to clamp CO2 containers onto the vessel that will carry liquid CO2 from Antwerp to the Project Greensand subsea reservoir in the Danish part of the North Sea.

At the same time, Semco Maritime has worked intensively to develop the design of the pumping system that will transport the liquid CO2 from the containers via the Nini West platform in the Danish part of the North Sea and 1,800 metres below the sea, where the CO2 will be permanently stored in a sandstone reservoir.

Local production in Esbjerg with focus on recycling
Having completed the structural and pumping system designs, Semco Maritime is ready to start local production at Semco Maritime’s premises in Esbjerg. After production, Semco Maritime will be in charge of installing the equipment on the vessel.

”We are pleased that the production and assembly of equipment helps us maintain local jobs”, says Anders Benfeldt.

The pumping system design for transporting the liquid CO2 is quite new. Semco Maritime has chosen a combination of buying and renting the actual equipment for this purpose.

It makes sense to reuse the resources that can be reused in connection with the pumping systems – both from a climate and economic point of view,” says Anders Benfeldt.

The new design is part of the progressing works of Project Greensand. Tank containers and vessel are already in place, meaning that the first CO2 can be shipped for CO2 storage below the North Sea as planned.

”We are pleased that Semco Maritime has agreed to join Project Greensand. Semco Maritime has long-term experience of transporting and safeguarding CO2, and their contribution is crucial for the project. It is gratifying to see how companies’ previous experience and innovation skills go hand in hand in a project like this,” says Søren Reinhold Poulsen, Project Director at Project Greensand.

The new designs are all part of the pilot phase of Project Greensand whose mission is to develop and demonstrate how CO2 can be stored in the Danish North Sea as part of the green transition.

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