CO₂ infrastructure for industrial decarbonisation

As a key infrastructure partner, we want to accelerate the energy transition with infrastructure for different molecules. We aim to offer customers an annual transport capacity of 30 million tonnes of CO₂ by 2030.

To achieve this, CO₂ networks must be interconnected across industrial clusters and countries through integrated infrastructure, including maritime export terminals and offshore pipeline corridors.

Step-by-step development

Joint development

Since early 2021, we have been preparing the necessary CO₂ infrastructure in cooperation with industry, partners, government authorities, operators and other stakeholders across the regions where we operate and beyond — including key industrial clusters and maritime hubs in North-West Europe — to enable competitive decarbonisation CO₂ export routes. We are doing everything we can to offer our customers the first transmission capacity for CO₂ as soon as the market is ready.

In line with needs

We are developing transmission infrastructure for CO₂ in line with the needs of industry.

Building an interconnected system

We are planning connections between industrial areas, countries and export hubs in order to build the CO₂ networks into integrated systems.

Focus on competitive tariffs

Thanks to the interconnections, we aim to offer high-capacity infrastructure at competitive rates thanks to the scale effect.

Enabling competitive industrial decarbonisation

We are laying the foundation for a large-scale industrial decarbonisation of Northwest Europe while preserving its industrial competitiveness, by linking Northwest Europe’s industrial clusters to storage sites in the North Sea.

CO2 at Dunkerque LNG

The CO₂ network: Belgium links industry to storage

Focus on Belgium

Fluxys CO2 network plan

Long-term vision CO₂ network:

Belgium as a hub for CO₂ transit and export