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PRIVACY
Economic Development

Humber Zero policy push plea as partners underline readiness to capture carbon

Phillips 66, VPI and Harbour Energy share platform to update on huge decarbonisation project

Humber Zero's project leaders have made a policy push plea to Westminster as a project update was given to key stakeholders in northern Lincolnshire.(Image: PA / Humber Zero)

Leading figures behind the plans to decarbonise the Humber’s most potent cluster have told how a final policy push from government is vital to realise the huge benefits of carbon capture and storage.

Phillips 66, together with VPI and Harbour Energy, welcomed key community stakeholders to an event at the Humber Refinery to update on the £1.2 billion plans. Humber Zero unites the two neighbouring operators in oil and power, with the latter providing the transportation and storage infrastructure - Viking CCS - while also adding import opportunities and a solution for more emitters.

Highlighted as a leading candidate for the government’s next sequencing round, the representatives behind the work told councillors, community figures and Hull and Humber Chamber of Commerce how it was vital it was achieved, with the financial framework key to delivery.

Read more: Humber's low carbon push remains on government's radar - senior civil servant

Chris Gilbert, manager of Humber decarbonisation projects at Phillips 66, said: “The business model needs government support. There is an analogy with what happened with offshore wind. We see carbon capture being a similar business model. We need that government support in the first instance to build these capture plants. As an industry and as a country we need to remain competitive. We believe the products we make will be relevant in the future. What we don’t want to do is not operate here, not refine here, as then we’re in a conversation about energy security.

“That business model will keep us whole, keep us competitive with the rest of the world.”

Harbour Energy's Paul Davis, VPI's Jonathan Briggs and Phillips 66's Chris Gilbert, front centre, meet community stakeholders at a special Humber Zero update at Phillips 66 Humber Refinery.(Image: Reach Plc)

Paul Fursey, Phillips 66 lead º£½ÇÊÓÆµ executive and general manager of Humber Refinery had welcomed guests to the plant’s Newton Building corporate base, telling guests how the company was “advancing the refinery of the future, putting a lot of time, money and effort in to the transition, modernising the refinery and positioning it to do something a little bit different, having less impact on the environment, both in the way we work and the products we produce”.

It now produces enough of the specialist carbon required by lithium ion batteries to put 1.3 million electric vehicles on the road a year, while also producing sustainable aviation fuel at scale, with used cooking oil now a key feedstock.