Switzerland signs groundbreaking bilateral agreement with Norway for carbon dioxide storage under North Sea, marking first such international partnership for climate action.

"The storage of CO2 will also be important for Switzerland on the way to the net-zero target."
Switzerland has just rewritten the rulebook on international climate action. In a historic move that reverberates across the continent, Bern and Oslo have inked the world's first bilateral agreement explicitly designed to bury carbon dioxide deep beneath the North Sea. This is not merely a diplomatic handshake; it is a critical legal breakthrough that finally clears the path for the cross-border transport and permanent sequestration of Swiss emissions.
Signed on June 17, 2025, by Swiss Environment Minister Albert Rösti and his Norwegian counterparts, this deal marks a definitive shift from theoretical discussions to concrete logistical reality. While other nations debate, Switzerland acts. The agreement establishes a robust framework allowing Switzerland to export its hard-to-abate emissions to Norway’s vast offshore geological reservoirs. This partnership signals a dramatic escalation in the fight against climate change, proving that borders are no longer a barrier to innovative environmental solutions. The message from Oslo is undeniable: the era of isolated climate policy is over.
The ink was barely dry on the agreement before the private sector sprang into action. A dozen pioneering companies from both Switzerland and Norway have immediately launched pilot projects, seizing the opportunity to test the commercial viability of this carbon corridor. These are not abstract scientific experiments; they are the first steps toward an industrial-scale logistics network that will see carbon captured at the source, liquefied, and injected into the seabed.
The initiative aggressively targets two distinct fronts: Carbon Dioxide Removal (CDR) and Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS). While CDR focuses on stripping existing CO2 from the atmosphere, CCS intercepts emissions from heavy industry before they ever reach the sky. The initial volumes may be symbolic, but the trajectory is exponential. By integrating these technologies into international climate policy now, these companies are building the essential infrastructure that will define the next decade of European industrial sustainability. The race to monetize and manage carbon storage has officially begun.
Switzerland confronts a stark geological truth: we simply have nowhere to put the carbon. While the nation leads in innovation, it lacks the specific underground formations required for safe, permanent CO2 storage. In contrast, Norway, along with Denmark and Germany, sits atop the North Sea's vast potential as a continental carbon vault. This geographical disparity makes the new agreement not just beneficial, but absolutely vital for national survival in a net-zero world.
Environment Minister Albert Rösti did not mince words regarding the stakes. "The storage of CO2 will also be important for Switzerland on the way to the net-zero target," Rösti declared, emphasizing that this technology is a non-negotiable complement to existing decarbonization efforts. We are effectively outsourcing our geological limitations to a partner with a surplus of capacity. This pragmatic approach acknowledges that while Switzerland can reduce emissions domestically, the final mile of the net-zero marathon requires international infrastructure. We are securing our climate future by leveraging Norwegian geology.
This agreement was forged in the fires of the Longship Conference in Oslo, a project that symbolizes Norway’s ambitious drive to become the world's carbon graveyard. By integrating with the Longship project, Switzerland is attaching itself to the most advanced carbon storage infrastructure on the planet. This is more than a bilateral deal; it is a proof-of-concept for the entire world.
The volumes currently involved are just the tip of the iceberg. As the legal and technical hurdles are dismantled by this pioneering pact, the door opens for massive scaling. Switzerland is effectively positioning itself as a first-mover in a market that will soon be critical for every industrialized nation. By establishing the rules of engagement for cross-border carbon trade now, Switzerland and Norway are writing the blueprint that the rest of the world will inevitably follow. The pilot projects launching today are the seeds of a future global industry.