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Birmingham Post
Birmingham Post
Business
David Laister

Equinor awards major contracts for H2H Saltend hydrogen production project

Equinor has awarded two huge contracts for its Humber hydrogen production project.

Linde Group has secured both packages of work at the Saltend site, where the energy giant intends to produce 600MW of low carbon fuel by 2027. Its Linde Engineering entity has been awarded the front-end engineering design works, with group company BOC set to operate and maintain the plant for the first five years.

Both were part of a design competition, which included scope for engineering, procurement and construction of the plant, a kickstarter project for the wider Zero Carbon Humber ambition.

Read more: Prax unveils £300m carbon capture plan for Lindsey Oil Refinery

H2H Saltend will produce hydrogen with carbon capture technology integrated, a first of its kind and scale. First revealed in July 2020, it is seen as pivotal to helping establish the Energy Estuary as an international hub for such operations - with infrastructure stretching from there to Drax, and back to Easington, supplying the cleaner fuel longside a storage and transport solution for the harmful emissions the Humber’s industrial might produces at record UK levels.

It will reduce emissions at the energy-intensive chemicals park to the east of hull by a third, replacing natural gas for several operations, specifically the power plant Equinor recently acquired with SSE Thermal.

An early concept image for the Saltend Chemicals Park proposal from Equinor. (Equinor)

Asbjørn Haugsgjerd, Equinor’s project director for the H2H Saltend project, said: “We are delighted to be working alongside Linde, who have demonstrated their expertise and commitment throughout the rigorous selection process over the last year and through their previous work with this technology and operations.

“H2H Saltend is a vital first step in creating a low carbon hydrogen economy and achieving net zero in the Humber, safeguarding local industries and creating greater opportunities, whilst helping the UK to tackle climate change. With Linde Engineering, BOC and Johnson Matthey on board we are even better positioned to deliver this vision.”

Linde Engineering’s hydrogen and air separation technologies will be combined with UK-based Johnson Matthey’s LCH technology.

Linde, with a German and US heritage, is a global leader in the production, processing, storage and distribution of hydrogen. It has installed more than 200 hydrogen fuelling stations and 80 hydrogen electrolysis plants worldwide. As the UK's largest hydrogen supplier, BOC is described as having a proven ability in the safe and reliable operation of hydrogen plants, and also has a strong presence in the Humber region, alongside British Steel in Scunthorpe and specialty gases operations at Stallingborough.

Jim Mercer, business president for BOC UK & Ireland, said: "Linde is delighted to be playing a key role in the H2H Saltend project. With Linde Engineering’s technology and EPC capability and BOC’s proven operational expertise, strong regional presence and UK experience, we can together help decarbonise the Humber region and kick start the UK’s hydrogen economy."

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