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Enterprise

North Wales waste to energy firm secures £4m funding to capture carbon

Compact Syngas Solution managing director Paul Willacy.

A North Wales company has secured £4m in º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government funding to capture carbon produced from its waste to hydrogen activities.

Deeside-based Compact Syngas Solutions (CSS) has received the funding from Bioenergy with Carbon Capture and Storage (H2BECCS) Innovation Programme, run by the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero (DESNZ). It had previously secured a first round of funding of £246,568.

CSS have developed an advanced gasification process that generates hydrogen gas from waste products, including biomass like waste wood and other selected non-recyclable materials.

This waste is often sent to landfill, where it decomposes and emits harmful gases including carbon dioxide and methane into the atmosphere.

The technology harnesses this waste by converting it into syngas, a valuable gas that can be used to produce hydrogen for use as a cleaner fuel.

The new funding will help CSS build a full-scale rig to show that water can be used to separate and store carbon dioxide during the process. This has previously been achieved with amines, a potentially harmful compound derived from ammonia.

Removing the carbon dioxide reduces the carbon footprint of the hydrogen produced and makes the process more efficient. The syngas, once separated from the hydrogen, is also used in a gas engine that generates energy to power the process and export surplus to the grid, maximising outputs from the system.

During the project, the rig will run continuously for 1,000 hours, reliability testing the technology and getting it ready for commercialisation.