Council gives green light for major blue hydrogen hub in Cheshire

The hydrogen hub’s developers, EET hydrogen, intend to deliver two plants that will be capable of converting natural gas and fuel gasses from the existing Stanlow Refinery into hydrogen. A proportion of the process emissions will be addressed with carbon capture technologies.

The first plant will have a capacity of 350MW while the second will be bigger, at 1,000MW. There are then options to expand, with EET Hydrogen targeting 4,000MW by the end of the decade.

Local companies including Essar, Kellogg’s, Unilever, Tata Chemicals, Encirc and Pilkington will be the offtakers of the produced hydrogen. By using the hydrogen to displace fossil fuels in manufacturing and industrial processes, EET has stated, some 2.5 million tonnes of CO2e emissions can be mitigated each year.

Construction at the first plant is due to begin this year and first production is therefore expected in 2027.

EET Hydrogen’s project manager for the first plant said the hub is “a vital piece of the North West’s journey to net zero, underpinning HyNet and providing the opportunity for manufacturers in the region to decarbonise their processes and support UK jobs”.

HyNet North West is a collaborative initiative developing a low-carbon industrial cluster around the River Dee and River Mersey, with hydrogen and carbon capture and storage being the key focus areas.

As well as the businesses already mentioned, the initiative also includes additional hydrogen infrastructure developers and would-be hydrogen offtakers in other sectors, including Manchester Airport in the transport sector.

Hydrogen rainbow

The UK Government is aiming for Britain to host 10GW of low-carbon hydrogen by 2030 and take an early stake in this fast-growing but nascent global sector.

At least half should be green – produced by electrolysing water in processes powered by renewable electricity – and the remainder will be ‘blue’. In the longer term, pink hydrogen, involving electrolysis served by nuclear, may also be a significant option.

Blue hydrogen has its fair share of controversies, given the relative commercial infancy of carbon capture.

2023 analysis from Westwood Global Energy Group revealed that the UK could bring 17GW of hydrogen production online by 2030, based on the current pipeline. But more than 80% of this pipeline is covered by blue projects, meaning that the Government’s ambitions to skew the mix towards green projects could be at risk.

To allay concerns about the potential emissions footprint of blue hydrogen, the UK Government is developing a low-carbon hydrogen standard. Producers will need to evidence their lifecycle emissions before being able to claim their hydrogen is ‘low-carbon’ and thus that their projects are eligible for financial support from Westminster.