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Economic Development

E.on and partners to explore green hydrogen plan for Sheffield's steel industry

BEIS funding secured to assess potential for biomass

Blackburn Meadows Renewable Energy Park.

Green hydrogen production to support steel production in Sheffield is being considered after government funding was secured.

E.on, the city’s university and industrial partners are collaborating, with biomass to be explored as a feedstock. A consortium has been formed to assess the feasibility, having successfully tapped into the Department Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy and its Net Zero Innovation portfolio.

It will be based at E.on’s Blackburn Meadows Renewable Energy Park, the location of a combined heat and power plant. For the past seven years it has used recycled waste wood sourced from within the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ to generate 30MW of electrical energy and up to 25MW of thermal energy, powering up to 69,000 homes and businesses in South Yorkshire.

Read more: Centrica and Equinor sign agreement for East Yorkshire hydrogen hub

Partners include Forgemasters and Forged Solutions, working alongside Chesterfield Special Cylinders and supported by Glass Futures and the Advances Manufacturing Research Centre element of University of Sheffield.

Michael Lewis, E.ON º£½ÇÊÓÆµ chief executive, said: “Hydrogen will play a significant role in our energy future, mainly powering energy-intensive industries and long-distance transport. It sits alongside the drive for heat pumps meeting domestic heating needs and a greater role for district energy schemes in urban areas.

“Our Blackburn Meadows plant is the perfect example of a range of technologies coming together to provide a solution for an entire city and generating green hydrogen for Sheffield’s world-renowned steelmakers means an economic win for them, greater security of their energy supplies as well as better air quality for the city and accelerating Sheffield’s energy transition to net zero.”

A total of £400,000 has been secured from BEIS. The study will run from September 2022 to February 2023, looking at the requirements to switch from gas, as well as the production and distribution of hydrogen.