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Economic Development

Phillips 66 to pursue hydrogen fuel-switching for production process with £1m feasibility study

Contracts awarded to international engineering giants for Humber Refinery advance to Net Zero

Phillips 66 Humber Refinery at South Killingholme.(Image: Phillips 66)

A £1 million commitment to explore greener fuel generation at Phillips 66 Humber Refinery has been agreed.

The US giant is pumping £500,000 into pursuing the use of lower-carbon hydrogen to refuel industrial heaters at the South Killingholme site.

That funding is being matched by public funding through º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Research and Innovation’s Industrial Energy Transformation Fund.

Read more: Shell selected as carbon capture technology provider for Humber Zero partner

If the feasibility study is successful in determining world-leading technology can be used at the Humber Refinery to refuel geographically-remote industrial fired heaters with lower-carbon hydrogen instead of natural gas, it will demonstrate at large scale how the wider Gigastack project - connecting offshore wind to oil refining - could work.

Phil Gothard, Humber Refinery project development lead, said: “This is great news for the region as well as the Humber Refinery. It is another project helping the Humber Refinery play its part in the energy transition and toward its position as a ‘refinery of the future.’”

The heaters are integral to the refining process because they provide the temperature uplift to convert hydrocarbons to transportation fuels.

Contracts have been awarded to Worley and John Zink International, with the results to help develop a template for hydrogen refuelling that could be replicated globally.