UK| Update
that time. The so-called ‘clusters’ are areas where heavy industry is concentrated and infrastructure like pipelines transporting carbon dioxide for disposal would have multiple users. Following the selection of HyNet (on the west coast) and the East Coast Cluster as ‘Track-1’ CCUS clusters in November 2021, and the publication of a shortlist of power CCUS, industrial carbon capture, waste and CCUS- enabled hydrogen projects in August 2022, the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero has selected “eight projects to proceed to negotiations for support through the relevant business models”. The eight projects that form this “Track-1 project negotiation list” and which are said to “represent a range of innovative CCUS technologies” are as follows:
East Coast Cluster Net Zero Teesside Power bpH2Teesside
Teesside Hydrogen CO2 HyNet Cluster
Hanson Padeswood Cement Works Carbon Capture and Storage Project Viridor Runcorn Industrial CCS Protos Energy Recovery Facility Buxton Lime Net Zero
HyNet Hydrogen Production Plant 1 (HPP1)
The government says it will launch a process later this year to expand membership of the Track-1 clusters.
It will also launch a process to identify two ‘Track-2’ industrial clusters for follow-on CCS deployment.
The industrial clusters are also centres for developing hydrogen production options. The UK is hedging its bets by supporting both ‘green’ hydrogen from water electrolysis, powered by renewable energy, and ‘blue’ hydrogen options from gas with CCS. On ‘Green Day’, grants from three funding streams were announced for innovative hydrogen production, including two projects, both gas with CCS.
The government promised two further electrolytic hydrogen funding rounds from the £240 million Net Zero Hydrogen Fund in 2023, totalling 1 GW. Successful projects will be funded
Capture
by government until a planned hydrogen levy is in place.
Government expects hydrogen to replace gas in direct industrial uses. But it also said that having hydrogen available in the power sector could achieve lower emissions at a lower cost. It is “committed to ensuring that market frameworks can support the development of new hydrogen to power projects” and it promised a consultation this year on potential design options for market intervention to support it.
Biomass
The UK has stopped offering Contracts for Difference for biomass-fuelled projects and has promised a revised biomass strategy by the end of June 2023. However, it regards bioenergy with CCS (BECCS), as an option for ‘negative’ carbon emissions and it says it “remains committed” to achieving 5 Mtpa of engineered greenhouse gas removals by 2030.
Two potential projects, one proposed by Drax Power Ltd and the other by Lynemouth Power Ltd, were judged last year to have met the minimum criteria for deliverability by 2027. Neither has been progressed as part of the industrial clusters listed above. But the government said it was “preparing for the deployment of power BECCS”, and had made “substantial progress” on potential business models and it would open negotiations with the two companies.
Renewables
The documents trumpeted the UK’s success in offshore wind and the Contracts for Difference mechanism. It described offshore wind turbines as “established technologies,” saying they need to be deployed at pace.
In contrast, building onshore wind farms has been almost impossible in England, where the governing Conservative Party had in effect placed a moratorium on new development (projects have gone forward in Scotland and Wales under devolved development consent powers). That moratorium has been partially lifted: the government recognised that onshore wind is “an efficient, cheap and widely supported technology” and is consulting on changes to planning policy in England. But in
contrast to its call for pace in deploying offshore wind, onshore it wants “to deliver a localist approach that provides local authorities more flexibility to respond to the views of their local communities”.
The government is more enthusiastic about solar PV and it reiterated “ambitions for a fivefold increase in solar by 2035, up to 70 GW”. It is also bullish about floating offshore wind and announced “kickstarting investment into the UK’s emerging floating offshore wind industry” with the launch of a £160 million fund to support port infrastructure projects.
Taking out barriers
Action was promised in several intractable areas. First is speeding up development consent and government will consult on a revised set of energy national policy statements, including denoting offshore wind as “critical national infrastructure”. The second is cutting back the queue for network connections. A new Electricity Networks Commissioner has been tasked to advise government on what more can be done and an action plan is promised this year. On long duration electricity storage the government expects the new UK Infrastructure Bank to take a lead and ‘crowd-in’ wider sources of finance. But it promised “an appropriate policy framework by 2024” and more grant funding imminently.
Has the government done enough?
Overall, the government message on its ‘Green Day’ was that the path to net zero outlined in the Net Zero Strategy is still the right one. It said, “There are significant opportunities for UK industry the whole way through the supply chain. We want UK companies to continue playing a key role in green supply chains, from nuclear to CCUS and electric vehicles”.
The Climate Change Committee, an independent body tasked with monitoring the UK’s progress towards Net Zero, was cautious on whether the ambition of the government’s publications matched their number. Its full analysis will be published in its annual Progress Report to Parliament in June.
Biomass storage facilities at Drax, left, and Lynemouth, right. Both are in negotiation with the UK government about potential deployment of power BECCS (bioenergy with CCS)
www.modernpowersystems.com | April 2023 | 13
Page 1 |
Page 2 |
Page 3 |
Page 4 |
Page 5 |
Page 6 |
Page 7 |
Page 8 |
Page 9 |
Page 10 |
Page 11 |
Page 12 |
Page 13 |
Page 14 |
Page 15 |
Page 16 |
Page 17 |
Page 18 |
Page 19 |
Page 20 |
Page 21 |
Page 22 |
Page 23 |
Page 24 |
Page 25 |
Page 26 |
Page 27 |
Page 28 |
Page 29 |
Page 30 |
Page 31 |
Page 32 |
Page 33 |
Page 34 |
Page 35 |
Page 36 |
Page 37 |
Page 38 |
Page 39 |
Page 40 |
Page 41 |
Page 42 |
Page 43 |
Page 44 |
Page 45 |
Page 46 |
Page 47