Senator Hoeven announces $5.1M award to make Buelah plant world's largest carbon capture, utilization and storage site

Image provided by office of Senator John Hoeven
Image provided by office of Senator John Hoeven

(Fargo, ND) -- Senator John Hoeven today announced a $5.1 million award to advance carbon capture, utilization and storage (CCUS) monitoring at the Great Plains Synfuels Plant in Beulah, North Dakota.

Hoven said the monitoring and sequestration project, which is being led by the Energy & Environmental Research Center (EERC), is key to the development of commercially-viable CCUS. 

The senator said the project will advance the expansion of CCUS at the Dakota Gasification Company’s (DGC) Great Plains Synfuels Plant, which would make the facility the largest coal-based CCUS project utilizing geologic storage in the world and the first project in the U.S. to utilize both enhanced oil recovery and geologic storage. 

“This $5.1 million award is a crucial investment in the future of CCUS and baseload power. Under this project, EERC is developing cost-effective methods for monitoring and verifying CO2 storage. That’s key not only to the DGC project, which is the largest of its kind in the world, but to all of the coal-based CCUS projects across our state,” said Hoeven.