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PRIVACY
Economic Development

Global recognition of carbon capture's 'critical role' endorsed in the Humber hotspot

International Energy Agency executive director's highlighting of technology welcomed by Equinor and Drax

A concept image for the Saltend Chemicals Park proposal from Equinor.(Image: Equinor)

Key industrial figures on the Humber have told how they are poised to meet the Net Zero challenge after the International Energy Agency highlighted the ‘critical role’ of carbon capture in achieving climate goals.

Equinor, Drax and Vitol are all behind significant projects that could be brought together as a holistic Humber approach.

Efforts in the region were highlighted in the major report, which acclaimed the vital infrastructure that will kickstart the transformation of one of Europe’s biggest blackspots.

IEA executive director Fatih Birol has said that without carbon capture use and storage “our energy and climate goals will be virtually impossible to reach”.

The Humber is leading the charge in the technology deployment in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, with both Chancellor Rishi Sunak and Business Secretary Alok Sharma acknowledging the strides taken as money was committed to progress deployment nationwide.

Equinor’s Hydrogen to Humber (H2H) Saltend project was revealed in July.  The energy giant is the lead partner in the Zero Carbon Humber campaign, and the company behind a huge proposal to produce hydrogen from natural gas at the chemicals park, with carbon capture to be deployed.

Lord Chris Haskins, then chair of Humber LEP; Will Gardiner, chief executive of Drax Group; Steinar Eikaas, vice president of low carbon solutions at Equinor and Zac Richardson, business development director at National Grid Ventures, ahead of the Zero Carbon Humber launch last September.(Image: Drax Group)

Dan Sadler, º£½ÇÊÓÆµ low carbon strategy director at Equinor, said: “This IEA report rightly stresses the importance of carbon capture, alongside other low carbon technologies like hydrogen, in decarbonising industrial clusters. Equinor can bring its experience of these technologies to the Humber, where alongside other big-name partners it is bidding for funding to kickstart a Zero Carbon Humber.

“The Humber is the largest emitting cluster in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ and it requires large-scale cutting-edge technology delivered by experienced operators to tackle this. Through the Zero Carbon Humber Partnership, anchored by H2H Saltend, we can bring real change to this region, building on its reputation as the Energy Estuary whilst protecting and creating jobs, and attracting future inward investment.”