Aramis takes next step towards investment decision
The Aramis project, a transport infrastructure for large-scale CO2 reduction, is making progress towards a final investment decision. The project is essential for achieving the climate goals and preserving the industry. The cabinet has also recognized this in the supplementary climate package. The initiators Gasunie, Energie Beheer Nederland (EBN), Shell, and TotalEnergies are working on completing the technical design phase and have recently decided to amend their cooperation as set out below.
From April 2025, Gasunie and EBN will take more control over the further development of the Aramis pipeline. TotalEnergies and Shell will remain involved as partners until the final investment decision, contributing essential technical knowledge and expertise to help realise the project.
The initiators aim for Gasunie and EBN to make an investment decision as soon as possible in 2026. After this, Shell and TotalEnergies will primarily focus on developing CO2 storage facilities.
In the supplementary climate package, the government has decided to allocate funds for EBN and Gasunie as prospective investors in the Aramis transport infrastructure. This support is intended to realise the project as quickly as possible, given its importance for achieving climate goals and maintaining industry in the Netherlands.
The Aramis CCS chain (Carbon Capture and Storage) will make a significant contribution to reducing CO2 emissions in the atmosphere by providing industries that are harder to make sustainable with the opportunity to transport and safely store captured CO2 in depleted gas fields under the North Sea. The Aramis project provides an open-access CO2 pipeline with a capacity of 22 million tonnes of CO2 per year and aims to be operational by the end of this decade.