º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Economic Development

£27m backing for green jet fuel refinery welcomed as Westminster confirms funding for Altalto plant

Stakeholder reaction following Velocys securing the significant investment last week

Transport Secretary Mark Harper leaves a Downing Street Cabinet meeting this week ahead of the Advanced Fuels Fund announcement that has been received like an early Christmas present by Velocys and stakeholders. (Image: Kirsty Wigglesworth / AP / REX / Shut​terstock)

The South Humber Bank’s emerging central role in cleaning up aviation has been highlighted as funding of the proposed green jet fuel plant at Stallingborough was officially confirmed.

Velocys secured £27 million to support the development of the consented Altalto refinery, as first reported last week. It is a £350 million scalable plant that will create more than 100 jobs, with many more in construction.

One of five proposals sharing £165 million from the Advanced Fuels Fund, the AIM-listed technology company is also at early development stage on a project looking at carbon capture and hydrogen feedstocks - with the Humber a potential location for that too with an emerging pipeline network for both. It also benefited with a £2.5 million grant, along with substantial awards for plants in Port Talbot, Teesside and Ellesmere Port.

Read more: Leading º£½ÇÊÓÆµ fund manager increases Pensana stake ahead of Saltend big build

The investments come at the end of a year that saw Altalto’s near neighbour, Phillips 66 Humber Refinery, start at-scale production in a º£½ÇÊÓÆµ first. British Airways, partnered alongside Velocys in Altalto, is the customer.

Transport Secretary Mark Harper said: “Using waste or by-products to refuel airliners sounds like a flight of fancy, but thanks to £165 million of Government funding it’s going to help us make guilt-free flying a reality. It’s exactly this kind of innovation that will help us create thousands of green jobs across the country and slash our carbon emissions.”

Velocys is currently raising the necessary funds to deliver the plant as it secures offtake agreements while policy has been ironed out in Westminster. Earlier this summer the Jet Zero Strategy was launched, with representatives of the Oxford University spin-off on the overseeing council.

The Department for Transport released the detail, highlighting how “Immingham will be at the centre of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s push to slash carbon emissions from aviation, with the Government awarding Velocys PLC £27 million to develop a sustainable aviation fuel production facility”.