Worley tapped to design Bayou Bend carbon capture and storage project near Houston

The owners of the Bayou Bend carbon capture and storage project along the Texas Gulf Coast have begun the design process.

Chevron Corp. (NYSE: CVX), Equinor ASA (NYSE: EQNR) and TotalEnergies SE (NYSE: TTE), which are developing Bayou Bend CCS LLC between Houston and Port Arthur, have tapped Australian-based engineering firm Worley to design the carbon capture and storage project.

Worley has its main U.S. office in Houston as well as an office in Pasadena. The company is designing and evaluating carbon dioxide gathering, handling and sequestration facilities in Southeast Texas for the project from its Houston office, with support from its global integrated delivery teams in India.

“We’re committed to a strong partnership with Bayou Bend, drawing on our global CCUS knowledge and project execution experience,” Mark Trueman, group president of the Americas at Worley, said in a statement. “Innovative projects like Bayou Bend will potentially enable CCS at scale and help more companies achieve their net zero goals, supporting our purpose of delivering a more sustainable world.”

The project, which was initially a joint venture between Houston-based Talos Energy Inc. (NYSE: TALO) and Denver-based Carbonvert Inc., was selected as the winning bidder for the Texas General Land Office’s Jefferson County carbon storage lease offshore Beaumont and Port Arthur in 2021. It was the first offshore lease in the U.S. dedicated to carbon dioxide sequestration, according to the companies and the GLO. California-based Chevron joined the JV in May 2022 as the operator with a 50% stake.

Houston Business Journal

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