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Economic Development

RWE's £1b carbon capture power plan progresses for South Humber Bank

New gas-fired generation could meet needs of one million homes and catch emissions to feed into emerging storage plans

RWE's Staythorpe Power Station at Newark, Nottinghamshire. (Image: RWE)

RWE has given further details on plans for a new gas-fired power plant at Stallingborough.

It is the largest of three major investments being progressed as the German energy giant embraces carbon capture and storage in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, with the purpose built proposal alongside two retro-fitting schemes at stations it owns and operates. Investment could total more than £1 billion in North East Lincolnshire alone.

First revealed in December as part of wider plans for the Viking CCS transportation and storage proposals on the South Humber Bank, RWE said it will have a capacity of up to 800MW, enough to power one million homes, while saving millions of tonnes of CO2 annually. It would create 50 permanent jobs, with thousands in the construction process, with hundreds of millions of pounds to be invested.

Read more: Significant CCS progress highlighted by Harbour Energy as Tolmount delivers

Location has yet to be confirmed, but RWE bought land off Hobson Way almost 15 years ago, with biomass the fuel-source then considered under proposals initially brought forward by Helius Energy, close to Lenzing Fibers.

It could sit between there and EPº£½ÇÊÓÆµI’s gas-fired plant, where there are consented plans for a 95MW energy from waste addition.

Tom Glover, º£½ÇÊÓÆµ country chair for RWE.(Image: RWE)

Tom Glover, º£½ÇÊÓÆµ country chair for RWE, said: “In order to decarbonise the power sector, support security of supply and enable large scale industrial decarbonisation, it is important that clean gas generation projects are developed. Carbon capture can support the expansion of the other renewable and low carbon technologies that RWE is a leader in deploying, by providing energy security through firm and flexible provision of electricity that is not reliant on weather. I am pleased to announce our plans for three º£½ÇÊÓÆµ carbon capture projects, representing an important step in our progression towards decarbonising our existing gas fleet.”

The 1.7GW Staythorpe plant in Newark, Nottinghamshire, would also be connected to the Viking project, which has been described as a leading contender in the Track Two cluster approach the government is deploying.