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Manufacturing

Humber Zero carbon capture plants on schedule for 2023 build

Technical boost from team as funding is still required for development and implementation phase

An indicative image of how the Humber Zero carbon capture and storage infrastructure at Phillips 66 Humber Refinery could look.(Image: Humber Zero)

Humber Zero - the huge decarbonisation project focused on the Immingham industrial cluster - is on schedule to enter construction next year.

Stakeholders in the ground-breaking £1-billion-plus carbon capture project have been updated on the transformational scheme.

It will see partners Phillips 66 and VPI Immingham - the refinery and power plant at the heart of the complex - remove up to eight million tonnes of CO2 annually by 2030 from the area.

Read more: Mapping out the future - Humber's decarbonisation pioneers unite to inform and educate

Hosting key figures at Healing Manor Hotel, they gave an update on the next stages of the project and how the proposed technology, to be integrated at both South Killingholme sites, is progressing to planning applications.

Further funding is still required to support development and implementation, alongside investment from the two companies, with the project part of the government’s cluster sequencing process.

Chris Gilbert, technical manager at Phillips 66, said it would be the first, industrial scale carbon capture project of its kind on a refinery in the world.

“The Humber is the largest industrial emitter of CO2 anywhere in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ,” he said. “It emits up to 50 per cent more than the next largest, in South Wales.