Haldor Topsoe, Green Fuel to promote green ammonia development
Danish energy solutions company Haldor Topsoe (Topsoe) will work with Icelandic hydrogen and ammonia experts Green Fuel to pursue green ammonia opportunities in Iceland.
Danish energy solutions company Haldor Topsoe (Topsoe) will work with Icelandic hydrogen and ammonia experts Green Fuel to pursue green ammonia opportunities in Iceland.
Mining giant Rio Tinto will promote the use of decarbonisation through a collaboration with carbon capture expert Carbfix, which will see the companies capturing and permanently storing carbon dioxide (CO2) underground at the ISAL aluminium...
Carbon dioxide (CO2) capture specialists Climeworks has begun operations at its direct air capture (DAC) and storage plant, Orca, the largest facility of its kind.
A record purchase agreement has been signed between carbon dioxide (CO2) removal pioneer Climeworks and risk group Swiss Re to join forces in the effort to scale up carbon removal technology.
Subsidiaries of Reykjavik Energy, Carbfix and ON Power, have been granted €3.9m from the EU Innovation Fund for the Silverstone project.
The global cement making industry is one of the largest emitters of carbon dioxide (CO2) and is responsible for 8% of worldwide greenhouse gas emissions – four times more than the aviation sector.
Carbfix and Dan-Unity CO2 have inked an agreement for the shipment of carbon dioxide (CO2) to the Coda Terminal – a new CO2 mineral storage terminal in Straumsvík, Iceland.
Last month, gasworld reported that Swiss direct air capture (DAC) company Climeworks said it will construct a new plant in Iceland that will be able to permanently remove 4,000 tonnes of CO2 from the air...
Swiss direct air capture (DAC) company Climeworks has signed groundbreaking agreements with carbon storage pioneers Carbfix and Icelandic geothermal energy provider ON Power to lay the foundation for a new plant that it says will...
Iceland’s first station that combines biomethane and hydrogen under the same canopy opened yesterday in Reykjavík.