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Pensana and Equinor sign agreement as wind turbine recycling plans furthered

Magnet metals to be re-used through low energy recycling initiative at Saltend

Early nacelles and towers that together with blades make up a wind turbine head out of the Humber in the early days. Could end-of-life elements make a return for recycling? (Image: siemens)

Proposed Humber Bank neighbours Pensana and Equinor have signed an agreement to recycle end-of-life wind turbine nacelles.

A working group is to be formed to share technical and commercial information to develop a hydrogen-focused low energy method at the £100 million rare earth hub now being developed.

The potential was fist outlined as part of Humber Business Week last June.

Read more: Hull's blade plant could soon be behind 100 per cent recyclable production as new models launch

It comes just days after proposals for H2H Saltend, a hydrogen production facility also on the PX Group-owned site, was submitted to the government’s latest cluster sequencing round.

Paul Atherley, Pensana’s chairman, said: “We are establishing a world-class, independent and sustainable, rare earth processing facility at Saltend Chemicals Park. We are also looking to process end-of-life magnets from wind turbine nacelles using hydrogen’s properties as a powerful reductant.

(Image: Pensana)

“We very much look forward to working with Equinor using hydrogen from the H2H Saltend project in establishing this innovative process route as a key component in the circular economy for rare earth magnets in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ.”

The partnership with the Norwegian energy major will support Pensana’s focus on an “addressable” annual market of 4,000 tonnes of end-of-life permanent magnets.

Mr Atherley said recycling permanent magnets utilising hydrogen not as fuel, but as a reductant, whilst benefiting from the decarbonised power supply within Saltend, offers a clean alternative using 88 per cent less energy than virgin magnet manufacture. He said it aligns with Pensana's continued efforts to produce a sustainable supply chain for these critical materials, while also mining for new minerals in Angola and shipping to the Humber.