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Economic Development

Biofuel bolsters economy and environment - Humber LEP responds to E10 consultation

Department for Transport gets response from home of º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's largest bioethanol plant

A general view of the Vivergo Fuels plant at Saltend Chemical Park.(Image: srenilson)

The economical and environmental benefits of greening up petrol have been flagged up to government.

Biofuels are being explored as Net Zero commitments loom large, with the Humber  home to the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s largest bioethanol plant, mothballed due to delays in target implementation.

Now the Department for Transport is consulting on use, with a strong case put forward.

Welcomed at the launch, and now formally responding to the ask, the Humber Local Enterprise Partnership has advised E10 use - as it is known -  would not only have a positive environmental impact, but could also help the Humber economy to grow.

Hull-based Vivergo Fuels employed more than 150 people and supported many farms in the region, but the £350 million plant stopped producing in late 2018, with legislative uncertainty high on the reasoning.

Richard Royal, Humber LEP’s energy programme manager, said: “The Humber LEP is fully supportive of the call for E10, which offers a quick and easy option to lower vehicle emissions whilst also supporting our local industry and agriculture.

Richard Royal, energy lead at Humber Local Enterprise Partnership.(Image: Simon Dewhurst Photography Ltd)

“The Humber has higher than average transport emissions but many families are not in a position to buy electric vehicles and as such our region’s EV ownership rate is around half the national average. Even with Government plans to end the sale of fossil fuelled vehicles, we will still have them on the road into the 2050s and need a way to lower their emissions in this interim period. The use of low carbon renewable fuels such as bioethanol is ideal for this and requires no behavioural change from motorists – just pick up the pump and fill your car as normal, but the fuel is greener.

“The mothballing of Vivergo was also a blow to the local economy and had a knock-on impact for jobs and skills, farming supply chains and º£½ÇÊÓÆµ self-sufficiency. If the introduction of E10 can also be a step towards potentially getting the plant back up-and-running, we are keen to support this.”