The region HyNet North West covers – which stretches from Flintshire and Wrexham, through Cheshire, Liverpool and Greater Manchester into Lancashire – has the largest concentration of advanced manufacturing and chemical production in the UK, including Hanson’s Padeswood cement works, near Mold, Flintshire.
The announcement will result in huge economic benefits to the region, safeguarding existing jobs and creating around 6,000 new employment opportunities. It also gives Hanson the confidence to invest in a carbon capture plant at its Padeswood cement works, which will connect to the planned HyNet CO2 transport and storage system. The company is already carrying out a CCS feasibility study at the site, which will provide a clear design basis and cost estimate for the next stage.
Hanson CEO Simon Willis said: “This announcement is fantastic news for everyone involved in HyNet North West, and we are excited to be the first UK cement producer working on CCS in the UK as part of this collaborative project. Cutting CO2 emissions is a key priority for us, and we’ve already taken big steps in the right direction, but CCS at cement plants is a key part of our pathway to reaching net-zero by 2050.”
The UK government recognises the decarbonising of industrial clusters is an essential part of the journey to net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, as described in its 10 Point Plan for a Green Industrial Revolution. As a result, earlier this year, it launched a process to determine the sequence in which it would support this, with track 1 clusters (HyNet and East Coast Clusters) to begin decarbonising industry from 2025 and track 2 clusters from around 2030.
HyNet will reduce regional CO2 emissions by up to 10 million tonnes – including up to 800,000 tonnes from Hanson’s Padeswood plant – every year by 2030, the equivalent of taking four million cars off the road. The project, led by Progressive Energy, is being developed by a consortium of regionally located partners, including Cadent, CF Fertilisers, Eni UK, Essar, INOVYN (part of the INEOS Group) and the University of Chester, as well as Hanson.
David Parkin, HyNet project director, said: “HyNet is led by the demand from organisations and stakeholders across the northwest of England and North Wales, who all want to reduce carbon emissions to net-zero. From as soon as 2025, the project will enable our manufacturing sector across the region to decarbonise, as well as providing the opportunity to transition the way we travel and how we heat our homes.
“The project partners are ready to deliver and, as one of the first two industrial decarbonisation clusters, we will play a big part in shaping the country’s hydrogen economy, positioning the UK as a global leader in the sector.
“We are looking forward to working closely with Government and the other clusters to deliver and grow the infrastructure as rapidly as possible, both in breadth and depth, over the coming years.”
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