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Manufacturing

Ineos and Velocys join Zero Carbon Humber to push pioneering Energy Estuary's Net Zero ambition

Home grown industrial giant and green jet fuel developer united on the Humber

Ineos, bottom left, and Velocys, an illustration of which is bottom right, have joined Zero Carbon Humber.

Two more major industry names have joined the Zero Carbon Humber charge to pioneer the region’s Net Zero transformation.

Ineos Acetyls and Velocys have swelled the partnership to 14, building on the dozen signed up at launch.

It comes just months after the consortium was selected by the Government - as part of the wider East Coast Cluster - to be one of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s first two regions to decarbonise its industrial base.

Read more: Decarbonisation? Humber has it all mapped out on route to Net Zero

Last month three specific projects within the proposed dual network of hydrogen and carbon capture and storage were put forward to a second phase of funding.

Dan Sadler, vice president of º£½ÇÊÓÆµ low carbon solutions at Equinor, the energy giant behind the anchor hydrogen production plant, said: “We’re delighted to attract such major regional businesses to join our partnership which is moving from strength to strength. Both Ineos and Velocys have exciting and ground-breaking decarbonisation projects which support this region’s claim to be the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s Energy Estuary, will continue to create significant employment and skills opportunities and further our ultimate ambition to make the Humber net zero by 2040.”

Ineos, founded by former Beverley Grammar pupil Sir Jim Ratcliffe, acquired BP’s remaining operations at Saltend Chemicals Park in early 2021, where it employs more than 300 people, supplying into various industries such as food, pharmaceuticals, paints, adhesives and packaging.

A tenant of founding partner PX Group and neighbour to fuel-switching generator Triton Power, Ineos was also recently announced as one of six companies keen to take an initial offtake of hydrogen from Equinor’s H2H Saltend proposal.