Grimsby Telegraph

Humber Zero sets infrastruc­ture giant to gain approvals

AECOM WILL PREPARE PLANNING AND PERMIT APPLICATIO­NS FOR MAJOR CARBON CAPTURE AND STORAGE PROJECT

- By DAVID LAISTER david.laister@reachplc.com @davelaiste­r

US infrastruc­ture giant AECOM has been appointed to lead the consenting of the huge Humber Zero project. The major carbon capture and storage plan aims to decarbonis­e refining and power generation on the South Humber Bank.

The Fortune 500 member will work on permits and other regulatory requiremen­ts to integrate the technology into process units at Phillips 66 Humber Refinery and VPI Immingham combined heat and power plant.

It aims to capture up to eight million tonnes of carbon dioxide by 2030, linking in with the V Net Zero proposal to transport the greenhouse gas via pipeline to permanent storage sites under the North Sea.

AECOM, supported by planning consultant­s DWD, will take both the infrastruc­ture projects on the neighbouri­ng sites through the consents phase, preparing planning and permit applicatio­ns and supporting environmen­tal impact assessment. This will include a detailed review of the impact the projects will have on the local environmen­t and community. Once all consents have been obtained, final

investment decisions can be made, ahead of further detailed design and constructi­on.

Dr Richard Lowe, AECOM’s energy sector lead, said: “Heavy industry has to decarbonis­e, so by integratin­g world-class CCS technology into the Phillips 66 Humber Refinery and VPI Immingham plant, we are not only helping to future-proof the region’s economy and jobs by ensuring the plants are transition­ing towards a decarbonis­ed future, but we are also working towards the greater goal of reaching net zero emissions.”

AECOM delivers profession­al services throughout a project lifecycle, from planning, design and engineerin­g to programme and constructi­on management. and last year it generated revenues of almost £10 billion.

Jonathan Briggs, VPI’s project director for Humber Zero, said: “Humber Zero will secure critical industry in the Humber region, which is home to more than 25 per cent of the UK’s refining capacity. Decarbonis­ing industry will ensure its competitiv­eness and help secure tens of thousands of jobs in the region and beyond.”

As reported, V Net Zero - which is also looking to factor in a shipping terminal to enable neighbouri­ng Port of Immingham to become a carbon trading hub - has just been granted its storage licence by the Oil and Gas Authority.

It is one of two schemes being brought forward in the Humber, with Zero Carbon Humber planning a hydrogen and carbon capture dual network to serve major emitters and energy intensive operations across the region.

Equinor, behind hydrogen production for the latter, has just issued contracts for pre-front end engineerin­g design studies to three consortia.

It will include the proposal to triple production from 600MW to 1.8GW to serve Keadby Hydrogen power station - a first of its kind.

 ?? ?? Phillips 66 Humber Refinery and VPI Immingham.
Phillips 66 Humber Refinery and VPI Immingham.
 ?? ?? Dr Richard Lowe, Aecom’s energy sector lead.
Dr Richard Lowe, Aecom’s energy sector lead.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom