MAN Energy Solutions has won the contract for the delivery of three integrally-geared compressor trains (IGC) to the first large-scale carbon capture and storage (CCS) project in the Netherlands. The Port of Rotterdam Authority, Energie Beheer Nederland BV and NV Nederlandse Gasunie are jointly conducting the ‘Porthos’ (Port of Rotterdam CO2 Transport Hub and Offshore Storage) project, recognised by the European Union as a Project of Common Interest.

Porthos aims to store 2.5 million tons of CO2 annually in exhausted natural-gas reservoirs under the North Sea. The CO2 will be sourced from various companies in the Rotterdam port area – a region accounting for over 16% of Dutch CO2 emissions. The carbon will be compressed by the MAN-ES compressors then transported and injected into a sealed reservoir of porous sandstone over 3 km beneath the North Sea. Over a 15-year timeline, a total of 37 million tons of CO2 will be permanently stored in this way.  

Porthos has signed agreements with Air Liquide, Air Products, ExxonMobil and Shell and will capture their respective CO2 emissions, feeding them into a common pipeline that will run some 30 km through Rotterdam’s port area.

The MAN-ES scope of work covers the delivery of three RG 28-6 type compressor trains with an order for two additional units intended at a later stage. They will be located at a station on Maasvlakte. There, the CO2 will be compressed to different discharge pressure levels – to a maximum of 180 bar – with each compressor handling up to 250 tons of CO2 per hour. Part of the scope includes a dynamic process simulation, which will allow the compressor system to be operated to its fullest potential in terms of process efficiency.

From the compressor station, a 22 km pipeline will transport the CO2 in gaseous form to the P18-A platform in the North Sea where it will be pumped into the exhausted P18 gas fields 3200 to 3500 m below the seafloor. These two fields have a combined storage capacity of around 37 million tons. The system is expected to be operational by 2026.


Image courtesy of MAN Energy Solutions