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Ports & Logistics

Green fuel and vessel charging plan emerges as Grimsby aims to be national Clean Maritime Demonstration Hub

Infrastructure will sit behind national Clean Maritime Demonstration Hub plans for world-leading wind energy cluster

Service operations vessel Wind of Hope arrives in Port of Grimsby, with the Orsted East Coast operations base in the foreground, alongside the iconic Dock Tower.(Image: Orsted)

Almost £300,000 has been secured to deliver green fuel and energy infrastructure for vessels at Port of Grimsby.

The funding will be used to build a business case for significant investment, running alongside work to establish the town as the national Clean Maritime Demonstration Hub.

The bulk of the funding - from the Department for Transport and Innovate º£½ÇÊÓÆµ-backed Clean Maritime Demonstration Competition, will sit with the Offshore Renewable Energy Catapult.

Read more: Immingham's pioneering green port plans progress with government grant bid win

It has already established its operations and maintenance centre of excellence in Grimsby.

Partners in the proposal include port operator ABP, Rix Shipping, Infrastrata Plc, Lloyd’s Register, TPG Maritime, Zero Emissions Maritime Technology, Wood Group and MJR Controls.

Together they will develop zero emission fuels and charging infrastructure at Port of Grimsby. All will have match-funding of contributions in an initial phase of the project valued at over £400,000.

The proposal describes the project as “harnessing the 'industry-pull' of the offshore wind industry as a 'springboard' for the adoption of clean maritime technologies,” with the project-team to undertake detailed feasibility to identify the infrastructure requirements to support clean maritime operations from the port.