Carbon Capture
ARC is working towards making the waste-to-energy plant Amager Bakke CO2-neutral. Over the years, ARC has tested and refined the technology with two smaller carbon capture units. In 2025, we established the CopenCaptrue project in collaboration with the german energy company E.ON. The partnership aims to capture 400,000 ton of CO2 annually by 2030. This will be an important contribution to both the green transition in Denmark and Copenhagen’s ambitions to reach CO2-neutrality.
How carbon capture works
CO2 is captured by a chemical process in which the CO2 molecules are washed out of flue gas and captured in a liquid.
1. Your waste becomes electricity, district heating… and CO2
ARC receives combustible waste every day at Amager Bakke. ARC utilises the energy in the waste for electricity and district heating.
Like all other combustion processes, waste energy also emits CO2. But unlike air exhaled from our lungs, it’s easier to capture. Amager Bakke is perfect for capturing CO2, because the plant is in operation 24/7/365. That provides a large, stable supply of CO2 which is necessary for efficient carbon capture.
2. Absorber
When the flue gas from the waste incineration has been purified, it’s approximately 40 degrees, and consists almost entirely of CO2 and water vapour. The purified flue gas starts by passing through an absorber. – As the name suggests, this is where the CO2 is absorbed from the flue gas.
The absorber is shaped like a tower, with smoke fed in from the bottom so that it rises upwards, while being flushed from above with an alkaline amine liquid. CO2 is bound by and into the amine liquid. Only the water vapour and a the left over amount of CO2 is exiting the chimney at the plant. The CO2 containing amine liquid continues on to the desorber.
3. Desorber
From the absorber, the CO2 containing amine liquid continues on to the desorber, which is the most energy-intensive part of the process. In the desorber, the liquid is heated up to approximately 105 degrees. This releases the CO2 from the amine liquid. – It’s a bit like fizzy drinks going flat when they get warm. The CO2 can then be collected and transported for storage or utilization.
Once the amine liquid has released the CO2 into the desorber, the liquid can easily be used again. Once cooled, it’s led back to the absorber, where it captures CO2 again. And again. And again.
Due to the high energy consumption, it can be difficult to make carbon capture climate-friendly. But Denmark has the big advantage of our widespread district heating network where excess heat can be reused. This also applies to carbon capture at Amager Bakke: We have a goal of harvesting the surplus heat and utilize it in the district heating network when capturing CO2 at a large scale in the future. This will enable net-zero energy consumption.
4. CO2 storage and Power-to-X
The CO2 collected from the desorber is pressurised and stored in tanks, just like the CO2 cartridges used for homemade soda: when CO2 is mixed with water, it turns into carbonated water.
The captured CO2 can either be stored below ground, or eventually converted into green fuels
(Power-to-X). According to GEUS, the Danish underground is particularly suitable for storing CO2, and it will be possible to store 500-1000 years of total Danish emissions at the current level.
5. CO2 negative = Climate positive
In CO2 accounting, a distinction is made between CO2 from fossil sources, such as plastic, petrol and gas, and CO2 from biogenic sources such as wood, straw and potato peelings. Even though CO2 is CO2, a distinction is made between what is already in rotation between plants and the air (biogenic), and all the extra CO2 we add to the atmosphere by digging or pumping it up from underground. Something is only considered CO2-neutral if it only emits CO2 from biogenic sources, e.g. if energy comes from burning straw or wood pellets.
A lot of the residual waste at Amager Bakke comes from biogenic sources. But there is still fossil residual waste ending up at Amager Bakke (and any other waste-to-energy plant). If all of the CO2 (from biogenic and fossil sources) in one waste-to-energy plant could be captured, the plant would become CO2-negative – It’s not just the extra CO2 that’s removed, but also the CO2 that was already in circulation. Biogenic CO2 is thus removed from the atmosphere instead of being recycled.
Because carbon capture can lower the total amount of CO2 in the atmosphere, the technology is considered one of the tools that can help effectively limit global warming in the short term.
FAQ about carbon capture
Carbon capture is the capturing of CO2 in gaseous form. It’s achieved through a chemical reaction in which the smoke from, for example, an industrial chimney is passed through a liquid that binds or absorbs the CO2. The liquid can then be heated, so that it releases its CO2 in a closed container, from which it can be collected. Collected CO2 can either be stored or used to produce fuel (Power-to-X).
Carbon capture is an important contribution and above all an available technology to meeting the Danish climate goals of 70% CO2 reduction by 2030. It also supports the Paris Agreement’s goal of reducing global temperature rises to 1.5 degrees. The UN Climate Panel, the European Commission, the International Energy Agency and the Climate Council all state that carbon capture is key to achieving the goals of the Paris Agreement.
During the capture process, CO2 is compressed and transported to an intermediate storage facility at a nearby port. From there, it will transported to a storage facility – this can e.g. be in depleted oil and gas fields or other structures in the underground which are suitable for storing CO2.
Alternatively, some of the captured CO2 will be utilized. Especially the biogenic CO2 can be of high value when producing future synthetic green fuels for the shipping industry and/or planes.
ARC aims at capturing carbon at a large scale. Over the years, ARC has tested and refined the technology with two smaller carbon capture units. In 2025, we established the CopenCapture project in collaboration with the german energy company E.ON. The partnership aims to capture 400,000 ton of CO2 annually by 2030. This will be an important contribution to both the green transition in Denmark and Copenhagen’s ambitions to reach CO2-neutrality.
For more information on CopenCapture: www.copencapture.com