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ExxonMobil Starts Up Second CCS Project in Louisiana with NG3 Launch
Posted on 2/20/26 at 12:38 pm
Posted on 2/20/26 at 12:38 pm
quote:
ExxonMobil has begun transporting and storing captured CO2 from the New Generation Gas Gathering (NG3) project in Gillis, Louisiana, marking its second active commercial carbon capture and storage (CCS) operation in the state.
The startup strengthens Louisiana’s growing role as a US hub for CCS deployment across LNG, natural gas processing and other hard-to-abate industrial sectors.
Natural gas produced in East Texas and Louisiana is gathered through the NG3 system and treated at the Gillis facility, where up to 1.2 million tons of CO2 per year is removed from the gas stream before the product is delivered to Gulf Coast markets, including LNG export terminals.
The captured CO2 is transported and injected into geologic formations for long-term storage, with current operations utilising enhanced oil recovery and plans to transition toward dedicated permanent storage.
quote:
ExxonMobil says two additional CCS projects are scheduled to start operations in 2026, adding to a growing portfolio spanning ammonia, natural gas processing, steel, methanol, industrial gases and power generation.
quote:
Louisiana’s combination of favorable subsurface geology and dense energy infrastructure positions the state as a strategic CCS hub.
Beyond lowering emissions from LNG and ammonia, access to CCS is also becoming a factor in attracting new industrial developments, including energy-intensive data centers seeking lower-carbon power and fuels. As more projects reach operation, CCS is emerging as a core pillar of Louisiana’s industrial decarbonization strategy, enabling emissions reductions while sustaining regional economic growth.
LINK
Posted on 2/20/26 at 12:56 pm to ragincajun03
quote:
ExxonMobil Starts Up Second CCS Project
They will all disappear the moment the tax credits program stops.
quote:
The captured CO2 is transported and injected into geologic formations for long-term storage
Unless it leaks.
Posted on 2/20/26 at 1:01 pm to ragincajun03
I've got a great new pitch for Billy Nungesser's next commercial.


Posted on 2/20/26 at 1:06 pm to Bard
quote:
They will all disappear the moment the tax credits program stops
True, and I wish our tax dollars weren’t paying for this government-forced scam, but here we are, and the Big Beautiful Bill actually enhanced some of it.
quote:
Unless it leaks.
Ehh…I think Exxon can do it safer and better than ADM. CO2 and even worse gasses being sequestered isn’t anything new. It can be done safely. I’m just not convinced it should be done and required to “save the planet”.
Posted on 2/20/26 at 1:06 pm to ragincajun03
I thought the EPA just did away with the greenhouse gas emissions crap
This post was edited on 2/20/26 at 1:08 pm
Posted on 2/20/26 at 1:07 pm to ragincajun03
How much will this increase my Delta gas bill by?
Posted on 2/20/26 at 1:08 pm to Witty_Username
Nungesser and Jeff Landry are in full support of the $700 Million lawsuit vs Chevron & Co., yet they both support these taxpayer funded boondoggles all coming to Louisiana.
Posted on 2/20/26 at 1:09 pm to ragincajun03
Why are these companies picking nice places like Denmark, Greece and Louisiana for CCUS projects?
Posted on 2/20/26 at 1:13 pm to lowhound
quote:
I thought the EPA just did away with the greenhouse gas emissions crap
Doesn’t matter if the credits are still intact, and even enhanced in the big bill that was passed last year. Means the money is still there.
Posted on 2/20/26 at 1:41 pm to ragincajun03
This is simply buying “operation credits” for their refineries
Posted on 2/20/26 at 1:49 pm to Jack Daniel
quote:
This is simply buying “operation credits” for their refineries
The ruling class in Louisiana is making bank so it will be crammed down our throats.
Posted on 2/20/26 at 2:26 pm to ragincajun03
Pore space owners finally getting a chance to get in on the action.
Bigly money for injector well sites.
Bigly money for injector well sites.
Posted on 2/20/26 at 4:14 pm to ragincajun03
quote:
I’m just not convinced it should be done and required to “save the planet”.
^ This
Posted on 2/20/26 at 10:07 pm to back9Tiger
If Co2 leaks into or propels brine from the salt water collections under the Chicot Aquifer Louisiana is fricked.The Chicot Aquifer is the water source for 48% of Louisiana including Lafayette,Lake Charles and water source for Alexandria.
The LSU “scientists” are confident it won’t leak.However the sequestration site in Decatur Illinois was considered an ideal site due to the underlying sand stone formations but it leaked.
Recently came across an article from Scientific American concerning a potential nuclear waste disposal site in the Yucca Mountains in Nevada.The proposal was abandoned because the waste was a mixture of solids and liquids and scientists could not guarantee the waste would stay put as liquids could migrate through the microscopic holes and fractures found in the most solid of rocks.
The article goes on to say that the waste Co2 would be a buoyant,low viscosity”supercritical”fluid maintained at high temperature and pressure.
Like all fluids it would have the capacity to migrate through the ground.
What makes the situation more troublesome for Louisiana is there are thousands of abandoned well sites which would provide a conduit for the Co2 to travel upwards.
If this sequestration shite goes sideways Louisiana is going to have problems like no one ever imagined.
The LSU “scientists” are confident it won’t leak.However the sequestration site in Decatur Illinois was considered an ideal site due to the underlying sand stone formations but it leaked.
Recently came across an article from Scientific American concerning a potential nuclear waste disposal site in the Yucca Mountains in Nevada.The proposal was abandoned because the waste was a mixture of solids and liquids and scientists could not guarantee the waste would stay put as liquids could migrate through the microscopic holes and fractures found in the most solid of rocks.
The article goes on to say that the waste Co2 would be a buoyant,low viscosity”supercritical”fluid maintained at high temperature and pressure.
Like all fluids it would have the capacity to migrate through the ground.
What makes the situation more troublesome for Louisiana is there are thousands of abandoned well sites which would provide a conduit for the Co2 to travel upwards.
If this sequestration shite goes sideways Louisiana is going to have problems like no one ever imagined.
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