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Manufacturing

Huge carbon negative quarry project reaches build milestone as transatlantic collaboration dawns

Oxford University tech spin-out Origen is working with Singleton Birch

Marking the milestone for limestone: The team pictured in front of the pilot zero carbon lime plant at Singleton Birch's Melton Ross quarry.(Image: Origen)

A huge decarbonisation project involving one of northern Lincolnshire’s oldest industries has reached a critical point.

The multi-million pound pilot plant to demonstrate industrial scale clean lime production has been built, with the team behind it confident it will be operational before the end of the year. Tech specialist Origen, an Oxford University spin-out, is working with Singleton Birch at the Melton Ross quarry.

The initial phase is closing in on completion, with the team now looking at the second element - deploying a US-based specialist’s technology to use lime to draw CO2 out of the atmosphere.

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Ben Turner, chief executive at Origen, said: “The kiln is built and should be operational by the end of the year. We are going through commissioning, making sure everything works and then starting to switch on systems and work the plant. That’s expected to take the rest of the summer.

“It has been a difficult operating environment, the supply chain has been difficult, labour and the inflationary environment also, but nonetheless this is where we have got ourselves to.”

It is one of several carbon intensive industries looking to tap into the transformational Zero Carbon Humber proposal for the region.

“Long term the plan is to use the infrastructure being brought forward in the Humber to take CO2 offshore, but in the short term, the next three to five years, it is looking at various other routes,” he said.