Partners mull UK Freeport hydrogen projects
RWE and Mitsui have teamed up with the Port of Tilbury in England to develop an innovative hydrogen project at the Essex facility as part of a recently signed memorandum of understanding (MoU) for two green hydrogen projects.
Through the MoU, the organisations will complete two parallel work streams.
The first is a small scale ‘proof of concept’ demonstrator project to produce green hydrogen for decarbonising items of port equipment by switching away from fossil fuels.
The second stream is an initial study into a 10MW green hydrogen plant. The facility will be developed on Port of Tilbury land previously housing a coal-fired power station at the heart of the Thames Freeport. The project will also look at options to scale up development over a 10-year period upwards of 100MW. The hydrogen would be used for port infrastructure and operations in addition to providing green hydrogen to the surrounding industry.
“This project is another great example of Freeports driving the UK’s shift to a dynamic, low-carbon economy by developing the industries of the future,” said Minister for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities Dehenna Davison.
“This will bring great local opportunities by creating exciting new careers for people, demonstrating one of the many reasons why Freeports are at the core of our levelling up agenda,” Davison added.
Port of Tilbury commercial director and Thames Freeport lead Peter Ward commented: “This is an important opportunity to support the Port of Tilbury’s commitment to achieving net zero for our customers. Our business has set out our ambition to be carbon neutral by 2032 and net zero by 2042 by investing in the infrastructure in the ports.
“As part of Thames Freeport, our MoU with RWE and Mitsui to develop a new hydrogen plant at the Port of Tilbury will help accelerate the UK’s path to a decarbonised economy and support our vision for low carbon logistics.”
Welcoming the partnership, RWE director hydrogen development Steve Boughton added: “Hydrogen is a key component of the energy transition and we want to play a leading role in this, aiming to develop 2GW of capacity by 2030. This collaboration with Mitsui and the Port of Tilbury is for an innovative project combing production and industrial customer use with potential fuel switching of port equipment.
“Hydrogen will play an essential role in the pathway to net zero, particularly in hard to decarbonise industry. We are committed to playing a full part in the delivery of this emerging technology in the UK, and at the same time creating skilled green jobs.”
Shinya Umehara, Mitsui general manager hydrogen solutions business division added: “Mitsui has set a target of achieving net zero-emissions status by 2050 and aims to halve its greenhouse gas (GHG) impact by 2030, compared with the level for the fiscal year ended March 2020.”
“Hydrogen is one of the areas identified for Mitsui’s key strategic initiatives as stated in the Medium-term Management Plan 2026. Through this project, Mitsui is looking forward to playing an important role in the realisation of the UK’s hydrogen strategy in collaboration with the Port of Tilbury and RWE.”