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Economic Development

Prax unveils £300m carbon capture plan for Lindsey Oil Refinery

Humber proposal will support the cleaning up of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's most polluting industrial cluster

Prax Lindsey Oil Refinery. (Image: Prax Group)

A £300 million carbon capture project has been launched by Prax Lindsey Oil Refinery.

The huge investment, to take one million tonnes of carbon dioxide from the plant a year from 2028, was unveiled to a strong delegation from regional industry. It will involve a major infrastructure addition to the 55-year-old site, creating 2,000 temporary jobs, with significant supply chain opportunities.

Linking with the pipelines from similar plans being progressed from neighbouring Phillips 66 and VPI Immingham, and feeding into the wider South Bank model for transportation to sub-North Sea storage, it has been worked up by the team since the ink dried on the deal that saw the refinery bought from Total in March 2021.

Read more: Velocys and Bechtel agreement for Humber green jet fuel plant

Luc Smets, general manager, presented the plan ahead of a CBI-led regional round table event to discuss the challenges and opportunities of the £15 billion Humber 2030 Vision - the grand portfolio of decarbonisation projects set to transform the region from worst polluter to global leader.

He said: “We are planning to capture more than 85 per cent of the CO2 production, that’s good for one million tonnes a year, an accumulative figure of 29 million tonnes by 2050.

“We have some challenging targets as a region and as a country to meet for 2030 and for 2050, and we are convinced we need to join and work together with all stakeholders to make it happen.

“Total, with all respect, did not have a plan when we acquired the refinery, they made a choice to leave the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ for strategic reasons. We understood there was urgent work to be done. We started right away, and we’re happy to say we’re close to the pack, if not in the middle of the pack now.”