Phase 1 of Ravenna CCS — the first such project in the country — would store some 25,000 tonnes of carbon per year

Eni and Snam have started sequestering carbon dioxide at their carbon capture and storage project offshore northern Italy, the joint venture partners said on Tuesday.
The equal partnership between the Italian oil major Eni and gas transport operator has now officially started Phase 1 of the Ravenna CCS project, the first such project in the country.
During Phase 1, carbon dioxide emissions from Eni’s Casalborsetti gas treatment plant near Ravenna will be captured, transported offshore via converted gas pipeline for permanent sequestration in the depleted Porto Corsini Mare Ovest gas field.
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Eni estimates the process will reduce the plant’s flue gas emissions by 96%.
Capacity is planned to be expanded to up to 4 million tpa CO2 injection capacity by 2030.
Snam chief executive Stefano Venier said his company’s strategy is to become a “multi-molecule operator” to accommodate the energy transition and meet evolving needs of customers, in particular from hard to abate industries.
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“To do so, we leverage our long-standing expertise in the transport and storage of molecules,” said Venier.
The Ravenna CCS project has been backed by the European Union under its projects of common interests’ mandate.
NOTE – This article was originally published in upstreamonline and can be viewed here

