Oil and gas company Aker BP and maritime infrastructure specialist Höegh Evi are teaming up with Ports of Stockholm to establish a CO2 logistics hub at Norvik Port.
The goal is to enable “an efficient and sustainable transport chain for carbon dioxide from industrial emitters in eastern Sweden”.
The collaboration began in May 2025 as a continuation of the NICE project (Norvik Infrastructure CCS East Sweden) and follows completion of an earlier feasibility study.
Current work involves detailed design of the logistics node Stockholm Norvik Port in close dialogue with suppliers and project participants.
“Stockholm Norvik Port is ideally located for CO₂ collection and is highly accessible for carrier ships transporting the CO₂ to its permanent storage site,” stated Nils Jakob Hasle, EVP clean energy at Höegh Evi.
The deep-sea freight port, which opened in 2020, has both container and roll-on / roll-off terminals.
Ørjan Jentoft, CCS asset manager at Aker BP said the CO2 logistics hub “has the potential to become a groundbreaking project that enables a robust, integrated, and scalable European CCS network and make a significant contribution to achieving EU and Sweden’s ambitious climate goals.”
Sweden is aiming to achieve net zero emissions by 2045, an effort that will require both emissions cuts and CO2 storage.
