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PRIVACY
Ports & Logistics

Hydrogen port trial is a º£½ÇÊÓÆµ first for Immingham as eyes firmly fixed on £4b º£½ÇÊÓÆµ production prize

Huge import terminal and production plan will enter public consultation next week as containers move emission-free on quayside

The new Terberg hydrogen terminal tractor is put through its paces by Mia Allen at Immingham Container Terminal, unloading a container shipment from Rotterdam.(Image: Reach Plc)

A glimpse of an ever-greener future for Port of Immingham has been given as it prepares to welcome hydrogen production at scale on the Humber.

ABP has become the first º£½ÇÊÓÆµ operator to trial quayside machinery powered by the clean fuel, ahead of a public consultation into a huge plan to import ammonia, produce hydrogen and supply transport and heavy industry from the South Humber Bank location. CO2 imports could also be welcomed - feeding into the huge storage plans in the region - with a £4.6 billion economic benefit eyed.

Working with Air Products, the world leading industrial gas producer with whom it is looking to develop at the eastern edge of the estate, it has launched the pilot at Immingham Container Terminal, having received funding through Innovate º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s Hydrogen Innovation Initiative. It followed an initial feasibility study as part of the Department for Transport’s Clean Maritime Demonstration Competition.

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Simon Bird, port director for the Humber, said: “This is an innovative partnership demonstrating an alternative fuel, hydrogen, to power mobile plant on the container terminal. We have tens of these Terberg machines in use in the Humber ports, and this means zero emissions, with performance delivered exactly the same. We also see it as a way of enhancing our partnership with Air Products.

“The public consultation starts next week into the building of the marine infrastructure and terminal to handle the large vessels and import of green ammonia, transporting it to produce hydrogen. We can see today the importance of what we are doing on the Humber.

ABP Humber ports director Simon Bird, second left, with Suzanne Lowe, vice president and º£½ÇÊÓÆµ general manager at Air Products, Ben George of ORE Catapult and Andrew Ward of Terberg, with the fuelling station and prototype hydrogen tractor at the Port of Immingham.(Image: ABP)

“We have hundreds of thousands of such movements every year, and there is an opportunity to take significant emissions away.”

A total of 8,000 containers a week are handled by the port, with 500 heavy goods vehicles a day transporting them across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ - with the prize for fuel-switching clear.