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News Hanson’s Padeswood cement plant to host Hynet North West consortium carbon capture and storage study

Hanson’s Padeswood cement plant to host Hynet North West consortium carbon capture and storage study

Written by Global Cement staff 01 March 2021
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UK: HeidelbergCement subsidiary Hanson has partnered with the Hynet North West consortium for a study on carbon capture and storage (CCS) solution at its Padeswood, Flintshire, cement plant. The consortium is planning to implement carbon capture and storage installations at industrial facilities across Flintshire, Wrexham, Cheshire, Merseyside, Greater Manchester and Lancashire. It says that when active the network will constitute the world’s first low carbon industrial cluster, with a total reduction of 10Mt/yr of emissions by CCS. The Padeswood plant would account for 800,000t/yr of this total.

Hanson group chief executive officer Simon Willis said, “Our involvement in the HyNet North West project is the latest example of our commitment to cutting CO2 emissions. CCS at our cement plants will be a key part of our roadmap to achieve net zero carbon by 2050. The first step would be for us to carry out a feasibility study - this would give us a clear design basis and cost estimate for a capture plant and connection to the planned HyNet North West CO2 network and storage system.”

The HyNet North West project also includes production, storage and distribution of low carbon hydrogen, which will help to decarbonise other industries whose CO2 emissions primarily come from fossil fuels. The project, led by Progressive Energy, is being developed by a consortium of regionally located partners including Cadent, CF Fertilisers, Eni UK, Essar, INOVYN and the University of Chester as well as Hanson.

Last modified on 03 March 2021
Published in Global Cement News
Tagged under
  • UK
  • Hanson
  • Plant
  • Study
  • CCS
  • CO2
  • hydrogen
  • HeidelbergCement
  • Progressive Energy
  • GCW495
  • CCUS
  • carbon capture
  • decarbonisation

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