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º£½ÇÊÓÆµ 'must capture the carbon capture supply chain' to make race to Net Zero a true success story

Northern Powerhouse boss calls for strategy to ensure Humber's solution isn't purely a 'quick' win for Net Zero as needs laid out by refinery chief

Henri Murison, chief executive of the Northern Powerhouse Partnership with two of the Humber's biggest carbon capture projects, Humber Zero's Phillips 66 and VPI Immingham proposals.

The º£½ÇÊÓÆµ must learn from early mistakes in offshore wind and ensure it commands the supply chain to serve industrial decarbonisation, the Humber has heard.

Henri Murison, chief executive of the Northern Powerhouse Partnership, told how one blade factory was not enough to show for the investment in a sector the country leads the world in, and urged all involved to make sure pioneering positions in carbon capture and hydrogen production are not lost.

A £200 billion prize was highlighted but challenges of skills, volume of labour and manufacturing capacity were all underlined by those on the front line.

Read more: Humber vision 'has the world's attention' as investors and government pour over £15b pipeline

“An extremely good example of offshore wind success is here with operations and maintenance today, but we didn’t capture enough of the supply chain,,” Mr Murison said in a Future of Energy session at The Waterline Summit.

“If we haven’t captured the supply chain we are not making the most of the huge opportunity. We can’t make these mistakes again. One blade factory is a very good start, but with all the things we want for hydrogen and carbon capture, the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ has to capture the market, to get more of the value chain of these opportunities.

“Far too often the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ government’s policy has incentivised us to the quickest win to meet artificial political targets rather than grow industry to be world leaders. I’m not here to just shout ‘we should be first to Net Zero’; while we do that we need to generate jobs and opportunities for young people and those that need to retrain out of carbon intensive industries right now. If we don’t do that we won’t keep the public consensus for the agenda.

“If we want a CCS cluster here, in the Tees Valley and Merseyside, government needs to underpin that with commitment to make that work. It has to be real and significant, de-risking what the private sector wants to do. If not we can wave goodbye to lots of jobs in industrial sectors.”