This WP builds on the largest ongoing activities toward geological CO2 storage in Switzerland and takes the next key step in the national carbon capture, utilization, transport and storage (CCUTS) roadmap: a CO2 injection test at relevant scale into a potential storage formation. While global carbon capture and storage (CCS) projects often use depleted oil and gas reservoirs (not available in Switzerland), nine use saline aquifers, which are also present in Switzerland and expected to dominate global storage in the future. However, their potential, cost, safety, and acceptance remain unproven locally. CO2 transport and offshore storage, such as in the North Sea, increases costs by around 50%, adds emissions, creates international dependencies, and limits local value creation. Moreover, there may be public resistance to exporting CO2 abroad. Thus, exploring domestic saline aquifer storage is an urgent national priority to support decarbonization planning for sectors with hard-to-abate emissions. CITru is a pilot initiative focused on planning and executing a CO2 injection into the Schinznach formation at around 1,000 m depth, using an existing borehole in Trüllikon, Zurich. The well, originally drilled by the National Cooperative for the Disposal of Radioactive Waste (Nagra) and now owned and managed by the Swiss Federal Office of Topography (swisstopo), is in excellent condition and pressure-tested as of September 2024. Leveraging an existing high-quality borehole, CITru avoids around CHF 20 million in costs and shortens the timeline by at least five years compared to a greenfield project. While theoretical work informs storage potential, an on-site injectivity test is essential for advancing toward full-scale CO2 storage in Switzerland.