Stanlow Oil Refinery

Mitsubishi Heavy Industries (MHI) has secured a deal to design and deliver a carbon capture facility at the Stanlow Oil refinery in Ellesmere Port.

Engineering and design work has started on the second phase of a £2bn project to create a hydrogen production and carbon capture facility close to the River Mersey.

This hub will form part of the multi-billion pound HyNet consortium which will eventually supply up to 1,000MW of hydrogen to industrial giants such as Pilkington and Tata Chemicals.

Vertex Hydrogen, a joint venture between Essar Oil UK and low carbon energy firm Progressive Energy, has been leading the project. Now Vertex is being rebranded as EET Hydrogen and will be a sister company of Essar rather than a subsidiary.

EET Hydrogen has an ambition to deliver around 4GW of low carbon hydrogen by 2030, around 40% of the UK Government’s national target. It secured funding for the project from the Government in March.

Initially the hydrogen will be produced by burning methane gas – a major cause of carbon emissions and a contributor to climate change. This is known as ‘blue hydrogen’. The emissions will be ‘captured’ by the MHI facility.

Once captured the carbon will be piped to depleted gas fields under Liverpool Bay where it will be stored indefinitely.

Carbon capture and storage is a controversial technology. For the process to be viable it has to successfully capture and store between 90% and 95% of the carbon. This has never been achieved on the scale proposed by HyNet anywhere in the world.

Read more at: Liverpool Business News

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