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MNZ/Peak Cluster CCS partnership sets out path to net-zero targets

In a newly-launched report, the MNZ/Peak Cluster partnership has set out the opportunity to accelerate new routes to market for commercially mature carbon capture and storage (CCS) projects.
By Liam McLoughlin May 17, 2024 Read time: 5 mins
The partners say their plans will decarbonise 40% of the UK’s cement and lime industry. Image: MNZ/Peak Cluster
The partners say their plans will decarbonise 40% of the UK’s cement and lime industry. Image: MNZ/Peak Cluster

They add that their initiative will unlock private investment and ensure the UK can hit its net-zero targets.

MNZ/Peak Cluster says its partnership will decarbonise 40% of the UK’s cement and lime industry and ensure that close to four million tonnes of CO₂ emissions from vital industry within Peak Cluster will be captured and then permanently stored in Spirit Energy’s MNZ carbon store each year, from 2030.

The partners add that the project is set to generate the equivalent of £1.8bn GVA (gross added value) by 2050, creating and safeguarding more than 13,000 jobs across Derbyshire, Staffordshire and Cumbria, and attracting a further £5bn of investment in construction and operations. It will also see a combined annual increase of £154m in skills uplift and wage increases.

The partnership is calling for three key measures to expedite the delivery of CCS projects like MNZ/Peak Cluster, to leverage the growth potential of CCS and deliver significant socio-economic benefits to the UK:

1.    Provide an accelerated route to market for technically and commercially mature CCS projects. To continue to drive private sector investment in CCS and ensure that supply of carbon storage meets demand, there must be a clear additional pathway for delivery to new market participants beyond the established Track-1 and Track-2 processes.

2.    Deliver reliable carbon pricing on which CCS business models can be based. A predictable and stable carbon price trajectory - that ensures that emitting carbon is more expensive than storing these emissions - will bolster investor confidence in UK CCS projects, drive private sector investment and minimise the need for taxpayer support.

3.    Begin the ‘market transition’ phase now and support workable CCS business models. The Government should support a model of CCS economic licensing that offers subsidies that are directly linked to the difference between the cost of abatement and the price of CO2 on the UK Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS). A clear, transparent, and public benchmark will mean the government only needs to fund mature CCS projects when they are operational - meaning all development and capital expenditure will be owned by the private sector, protecting and creating jobs, and delivering higher wages without the need for significant upfront taxpayer money.

Spirit Energy – a majority-owned subsidiary of Centrica - has plans to repurpose the depleted Morecambe Bay Gas Fields in Barrow into the world-leading MNZ carbon store - offering a long-term decarbonisation solution to critical national industries across the UK’s industrial heartlands. The partnership between MNZ and Peak Cluster secures a sustainable future for the heart of the UK’s domestic cement and lime manufacturing industry.

Neil McCulloch, CEO of Spirit Energy, said: “Carbon capture and storage projects such as MNZ are going to play a pivotal role in delivering net zero in the UK and beyond.  MNZ is uniquely well-placed to provide scale in the right place, at the right time, to hit government targets and deliver the CCUS Vision with greater certainty.  Our ask is modest and pragmatic policy reforms that can then enable MNZ to drive industrial decarbonisation, growth, new green jobs, and economic opportunities in the UK.”

John Egan, project director of Peak Cluster, said: “The partnership provides the UK with an opportunity to become the world’s leading producer of sustainable low-carbon cement and lime. The MNZ carbon store provides the cement and lime sector with a route to reduce carbon emissions, protect the thousands of jobs and livelihoods that depend on it and stay competitive in a global market. With the price of carbon rising, the government needs to support commercially mature CCS projects like Peak Cluster to enable manufacturers to unlock a permanent solution to this challenge - simultaneously creating the right economic environment for growth and decarbonisation.”

Alex Cunningham MP, chair of the CCUS APPG, comments: “The MNZ Peak Cluster partnership is one of the most exciting prospective CCS projects I have seen in my role as Chair of the APPG. It is one of the most advanced projects in the UK, offering an opportunity to repurpose one of the UK’s largest gas fields into a world-leading carbon store, accepting carbon from an industry that has been a cornerstone of the Peak District’s economy for centuries. Beyond the significant economic benefits of the project, the scale of storage on offer makes the MNZ Peak Cluster a project that will be nationally and internationally significant.”

Spirit Energy is an energy transition company with two shareholders: Centrica plc (69%), and Stadtwerke München GmbH SWM (31%). Spirit operates in the UK and the Netherlands, with a 700-strong team, and 25 producing field interests.

MNZ (Morecambe Net Zero) is a joint venture between Spirit Energy and shareholders Centrica plc and Stadtwerke München GmbH (SWM). With a mission to provide a permanent decarbonisation solution, Spirit Energy will convert its depleted South and North Morecambe gas fields off the coast of Barrow-in-Furness to provide a permanent, safe and secure, world-class carbon storage, which will sit at the heart of MNZ.

Peak Cluster is made up of five of the UK’s leading cement and lime producers; Tarmac, Breedon, Lhoist, Aggregate Industries, SigmaRoc and the low carbon energy project developer Progressive Energy. From 2030, Peak Cluster will utilise carbon capture and storage technology to decarbonise 40% of the UK’s cement and lime production industry.

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