Environment

EU approves Greek state aid of EUR 150 million for Prinos CCS facility

Prinos CCS storage gains EUR 150 million in state aid

Photo: Energean plc

Published

October 29, 2024

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

October 29, 2024

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

The European Commission’s green light for a Greek state aid package of EUR 150 million is a major step towards the construction of a carbon storage facility in Prinos, offshore Kavala.

The Prinos Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) project, developed by EnEarth, a subsidiary of Energean, is aimed at storing carbon dioxide from domestic and industries from other countries. The investment is on the European Union’s list of projects of common interest (PCI).

The grant will cover around 90% of the funding gap, the European Commission said. It was approved through the EU’s Recovery and Resilience Facility (RRF) and the National Recovery and Resilience Plan Greece 2.0.

If the project turns out to be very successful, generating extra net revenues, the beneficiary would return part of the aid to Greece, under the so-called clawback mechanism.

The facility is planned to be deployed in two phases, with the first benefitting from the new package. Initially, EnEarth intends to install a pipeline to transport, from the onshore collecting site to the offshore storage site, up to one million tonnes of CO2 emitted by industrial players per year.

The facility is expected to start the ramp-up phase in 2027 and become fully operational in 2030. An expansion would follow, in the second phase, to as much as 2.5 million tons per year. Total cost is estimated at around EUR 1 billion.

On the supply side, multiple large Greek industries have already obtained EU support via the Innovation Fund for capturing and storing 4.5 million tonnes in total.

It should be noted that Italy has also expressed its interest to transfer and store carbon in Prinos from 2030, as part of its National Energy and Climate Plan (NECP).

The next steps

The final investment decision is expected in the first half of 2025. The government has yet to approve a carbon capture and storage (CCS) regulation, while a storage license is required from the Hellenic Hydrocarbons and Energy Resources Management Company – HEREMA, or EDEYEP in Greek.

However, the Prinos CCS storage project seems to be on a good path since there is ample demand and political support.

Comments (0)

Be the first one to comment on this article.

Enter Your Comment
Please wait... Please fill in the required fields. There seems to be an error, please refresh the page and try again. Your comment has been sent.

Related Articles

serbia post of electric vehicles

Post of Serbia expands EV fleet by 100 units

09 April 2026 - Electric vehicles significantly improve efficiency and accelerate the transition to a modern, environmentally sustainable logistics system

serbia desulfurization TENT B power plant

Serbia’s EPS starts trial operation of desulfurization system in TENT B coal plant

07 April 2026 - Power utility Elektroprivreda Srbije has started the trial operation of a desulphurization system at the Nikola Tesla B coal power plant

BiH town Gacko opposes 200 MW solar power project on agricultural land

BiH town Gacko opposes 200 MW solar power project on agricultural land

26 March 2026 - Local assembly in Gacko in Bosnia and Herzegovina withdrew support for a PV project on more than 200 hectares of agricultural land

Romania Hidroelectrica contractor Nehoiașu 2 hydropower

Romania’s Hidroelectrica to pick contractor for Nehoiașu 2 hydropower project

26 March 2026 - Hidroelectrica is selecting a company for the supply and installation of the equipment for the Nehoiașu 2 hydropower plant.