Work to start on Teesside and Merseyside carbon capture schemes

Aaron Morby 7 months ago
Share

The government has pledged nearly £22bn for projects to capture and store carbon emissions from energy, industry and boost hydrogen production over 25 years.

NZT Power scheme includes 860MW gas fired power station providing electricity for 1.3m homes
NZT Power scheme includes 860MW gas fired power station providing electricity for 1.3m homes

The funding commitment will kick-start two carbon capture cluster schemes on Merseyside and Teesside, promising to create thousands on construction jobs in the North

The highly anticipated £4bn Net Zero Teesside project  – led by bp and Equinor – promises to sustain 3,000 construction in the region.

Today’s confirmation of Government support for the big carbon capture, utilisation, and storage (CCUS) facility at Teesworks will allow work to start by the end of this year to allow operations to begin in 2027.

The proposed power station will generate up to 860MW of low carbon electricity while up to two million tonnes of CO2 emissions from it will be captured each year.

This captured CO2 will then be transported by the Northern Endurance Partnership (NEP) by pipeline to a geological storage site under the North Sea, where it will be permanently and safely stored.

Tees Valley Mayor Ben Houchen said the go-ahead was a monumental day for Teesside.

“The NZT project will provide power to 1.3million homes, help with energy security, but more importantly it will give generational job opportunities to local people as Teesworks becomes the new ICI – providing investment, training and well-paid jobs for local people.”

Teesside scheme projects


A CO2 gathering network of pipeline connections from industrial facilities on Teesside to transport the captured CO2

An 850MW combined cycle gas turbine electricity generating station, cooling water, gas and electricity grid connections and CO2 capture;

A CO2 gathering/booster station to receive the captured CO2 from the gathering network and CCGT generating station

An onshore section of a CO2 transport pipeline for the onward transport of the captured CO2 to a suitable offshore geological storage site in the North Sea.

Contractor delivery team

  • Onshore power, capture and compression – Technip Energies and GE Vernova consortium, including Balfour Beatty as the construction partner and Shell as the technology licensor
  • Onshore CO2 gathering system and gas connection – Costain
  • Linepipe – onshore and offshore – Marubeni-Itochu Tubulars Europe with Liberty Steel Hartlepool, Corinth Pipeworks and Eisenbau Kramer as the nominated pipe-mills
  • Offshore pipeline, landfalls, onshore outlet facilities and water outfall – Saipem
  • Offshore subsea injection system – Technip FMC
  • Power and communications cable – Alcatel Submarine Networks
  • Offshore systems engineering – Genesis
  • Integrated project management team – Wood

In Merseyside, the HyNet North West project includes businesses like Eni, Essar, Cadent, Ineos Inovyn and Uniper.

Delivering HyNet will secure £5bn of private sector capital to enable re-industrialisation of the region.

Development consent was granted for the CCUS cluster back in March.

A key part of the network will be constructing separate hydrogen and carbon dioxide pipelines in the region.

The mega project will also feature carbon capture on Heidelberg Cement’s Padeswood works in Mold, a new hydrogen production facility and energy-from-waste plants, sustaining an estimated 6,000 construction jobs.

The Hy Net scheme aims to capture 10 million tonnes of CO2 per year by 2030

The hydrogen pipeline network, being developed by Cadent, involves Wood E&I and WSP.

Eni is developing the carbon dioxide transportation and storage system that will serve the Hy Net transporting CO₂ to depleted gas reservoirs under Liverpool Bay.

Around 24km of the pipeline is repurposed from a former natural gas pipeline, while the remaining 36km will be newly constructed. The largest new section is between Stanlow and Flint, which is 32km long

There will be several spurs into the pipeline from big industrial users.

The spur for the Padeswood cement factory will be 8km long. Construction is expected to begin this year and to be completed by 2027.

 

 

Latest news

Buyers more bullish about prospects for year ahead

Residential "resilient" but commercial work a weak spot
6 hours ago

Council backs first Brutalist car park-to-flats scheme

Newcastle-under-Lyme multi-storey car park to be reborn as pioneering homes scheme
9 hours ago

Hinkley Point C hits peak build with 26,000 jobs

3,000 more workers to join as fit-out work ramps up
8 hours ago

Over 40 firms win Wessex Water M&E minor works deal

Broad sweep of specialists picked for AMP8 programme
9 hours ago

Spencer lands Scottish bridge hat-trick

Steelwork, gantries and bearing upgrades on Kessock, Forth and Tay crossings
24 hours ago

Winners revealed for £1.5bn decarbonisation deal

Fusion21 confirms places for 40 firms: Full list
8 hours ago

Cladding firm fined £225,000 after fatal fall

Court hears how cherry picker didn't reach all parts of repair job
9 hours ago

Early call-out for Ebbsfleet Garden City infrastructure

Bidders day to set out plan for Ebbsfleet Central commercial scheme
9 hours ago

Completed buildings caught-up in Gateway 2 chaos

Developer distraught after dealing with Building Safety Regulator
1 day ago

Aviva submits plans for 34-storey City office tower

Subject to planning work to start in autumn 2027
1 day ago

Murphy takes 40% stake in Aussie civils contractor

Firm enters Australasian market with stake in Sydney-based contractor Abergeldie
2 days ago

Moat seeks firm for £420m repairs and maintenance deal

15-year deal to upkeep 20,000 south east homes
1 day ago

Lynch takes over hotel for Sizewell plant operators

Hire giant now in the hotel business to guarantee accommodation for workers
1 day ago

Subcontractors wanted across Scotland

Latest Constructionline event in Glasgow: Register now
1 day ago

Six guilty of £2m bribery over Devon housing site deals

Corrupt building bosses and E.ON project chief and QS sentenced
6 days ago

1,650 former ISG staff launch legal claims

Redundancy Payment Service facing payout of more than £9m
6 days ago

Plans lodged for £1bn cancer research centre in Sutton

London Cancer Hub will deliver around 1m sq ft of lab and research space
5 days ago

London Met Uni seeks firm for £284m estate revamp

Contractor wanted to deliver capital works and FM
5 days ago

Delayed £2bn estate rebuild back on as Berkeley signs deal

Birmingham council development agreement paves way for 2028 Ladywood start
6 days ago

Tilbury Douglas boosts margin to 2.1% as profits double

Firm targets 3.5% margin by 2029 under new business plan
6 days ago

Subbies battle for fastest bricklayer title

Winchmore management team go back on the tools
6 days ago

Green light for revised McLaren Reading revamp

Mixed-use plans to transform Broad Street Mall site
5 days ago

Three arrested in Blu-3 and Mace bribery probe

Serious fraud office swoops over alleged £3m bribes to former Mace associates
7 days ago

Scotland’s most complex A9 dualling job heads to market

Market testing starts for £205m Pitlochry to Killiecrankie 6.4km upgrade
7 days ago

Unite signs £390m student beds JV with Manchester Met

Construction at Cambridge Halls site to start next year
6 days ago

Turkish contractor Limak to build new Luton Town stadium

Construction to start this summer on 25,000-seater venue
1 week ago

Kitchen fitter crushed to death by concrete blocks

House builder goes into liquidation before court case
6 days ago

Mears clinches £230m renewal for key Milton Keynes housing deal

Housing upkeep contractor achieves 100% renewal rate in bust rebid period
6 days ago

Murphy on board at new £32m rail station

Construction to start next year at Golborne station
1 week ago

HS2 engineers finish UK’s heaviest bridge slide early

A46 Kenilworth Bypass reopens 30 hours earlier than planned
1 week ago

Contractor services