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Economic Development

SSE expands Humber hydrogen storage plans to production and power generation 'pathfinder'

Big plans revealed for the topside of East Yorkshire salt caverns

Clean and green: Engineers use bikes to get around the Aldbrough Gas Storage site in East Yorkshire.(Image: SSE Thermal)

A first-of-a-kind project is being developed on the Humber to unite hydrogen production, storage and power generation in one location.

SSE Thermal is leading on the Aldbrough Hydrogen Pathfinder project, adding further layers to previously revealed plans to convert the huge caverns for storage with partner Equinor. It is described as an investment that could support the evidence base for wider deployment of flexible hydrogen power in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s net zero journey, while being a “major enabler of SSE Thermal’s wider Humber ambitions”.

A contract has been signed with Siemens Energy to deliver first phase front-end engineering and design, with the team keen to demonstrate the benefits of having electrolysis, storage and 100 per cent hydrogen dispatchable power on one site, seven miles north east of Hull. Siemens has worked on the Keadby cluster with SSE and is involved with hydrogen-based plans for decarbonisation at Port of Immingham.

Read more: Uniper and Shell's Humber hydrogen plan moves forward with contract awards

Catherine Raw, managing director of SSE Thermal, said: “We know that hydrogen has enormous potential as an enabler of net zero – and this project aims to prove that. Through the Aldbrough Hydrogen Pathfinder, we intend to bring together production, storage and power generation in one location and showcase how electrolytic hydrogen can provide home-grown security of supply while powering the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ to net zero.

“This ambitious project, which could be operational by the middle of the decade, represents an important part of SSE Thermal’s wider plans to decarbonise the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s most carbon-intensive industrial cluster and we firmly believe it can chart a path to a hydrogen future.”

The concept would see green power sourced from the grid through renewable power purchase agreements, in compliance with the Low Carbon Hydrogen Standard, covering it being fed in elsewhere. Hydrogen would then be produced via a 35MW electrolyser before being stored in the converted salt cavern. It could then be used in a hydrogen-fired turbine, exporting flexible green power back to the grid at times of system need. Other offtakers could also be brought on board, including industry and transport users, with heating also considered.

The Aldbrough Hydrogen Pathfinder aims to produce hydrogen and start filling the cavern by 2025, subject to planning consents and reaching a financial investment decision next year.