BBC News
Northwich CO2 plant 'worth 22,000 cars off the road'
27 June 2019
Share
Image copyright Tata Chemicals Europe
Image caption The carbon capture plant at Tata Chemicals' Northwich site will recycle 40,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide each year
The UK's first major carbon capture plant will be built in Cheshire.
Tata Chemicals Europe has been given a £4.2m government grant towards the £16.7m project, which will recycle 40,000 tonnes of waste carbon dioxide for use in manufacturing.
It will have the same effect as taking 22,000 cars off the road, energy ministers claim.
Carbon capture is part of the government's plan to hit its own zero net emission target by 2050.
Environmental campaigners said funding for carbon capture was "a step in the right direction".
The Northwich plant will be the UK's biggest carbon capture facility when it begins operating in 2021, Tata Chemicals said.
It is also claimed that it will be the first in the world to purify and liquefy CO2 as a raw material to make sodium bicarbonate, which is used in food and pharmaceutical processing.
'Hugely exciting'
The plant will extract the CO2 - which contributes to climate change - by exposing waste gases to chemical solvents known as amines.
It will represent 11% of the total emissions from Tata's power plant, which provides steam and power for the company's Northwich operations and other businesses in the area.
Tata Chemicals managing director Martin Ashcroft said the project was "hugely exciting" and hoped it would "demonstrate the viability of carbon capture and utilisation".
Other carbon capture plants exist in the UK, most notably at the Drax power station in Selby, North Yorkshire, which is capable of recycling a tonne of CO2 each day.
Drax was granted a further £500,000 towards a £1m project by the Department for Business, Energy & Industrial Strategy, which announced on Thursday a total of £26m of funding for nine projects that encourage industry to recycle waste CO2.
Energy minister Chris Skidmore said: "If we are to become a net zero emissions economy and end our contribution towards global warming, then innovative schemes like Tata Chemicals' will be essential."
In 2015, the government scrapped a proposed £1bn grant for the development of carbon capture projects.
Friends of the Earth's head of policy Mike Childs said: "While this funding is a step in the right direction, far greater support is needed to drive up efficiencies and force down costs.
"However, carbon capture must not be used as an excuse to keep the UK hooked on fossil fuels."
Related Topics
Northwich
Carbon capture and storage
Cheshire
Climate change
Share this story About sharing
Email
Facebook
Messenger
Twitter
Pinterest
LinkedIn
More on this story
Turning carbon dioxide into cash
24 June 2019
Drax power station storing CO2 gases from biomass fuel
26 November 2018
UK government spent £100m on cancelled carbon capture project
20 January 2017
UK government carbon capture £1bn grant dropped
25 November 2015
Related Internet links
Department for Business, Energy & Industrial Strategy
Tata Chemicals Europe
Friends of the Earth
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external Internet sites
More Videos from the BBC
'I got…
Huge cliff…
Trump's…
Trump…
'Lewd…
The…
Recommended by Outbrain
Elsewhere on BBC
BBC News Thieves steal rail bridge in Russia
BBC News Russian poker star electrocuted in bath
BBC News Trump threatens reporter with prison over photo
Recommended by Outbrain
You Might Also Like
BBC Travel India’s city where people come to die
BBC Future The ‘light triad’ that can make you a good person
BBC Travel Five countries on the frontline of tech
Manchester live reporting
Live BBC Local Live: North West of England
Full article BBC Local Live: North West of England
Top Stories
Hong Kong protesters storm government building
Protesters smash their way into the Legislative Council building amid widespread protests.
1 July 2019
Iran nuclear breach tests world powers
1 July 2019
North Korea media hail 'amazing' Trump visit
1 July 2019
Features
How rude service inspired a multi-million euro firm
Death of a poet and the struggle for hope
What's happening in the news this week?
Video
Inside Nigeria's kidnap crisis
Young Greeks lean to conservatives for future
The family that changed Australia's cannabis debate
Video
Could you do a video interview for your next job?
BBC Reel: The world’s largest undersea restaurant
Video
'They'll have to kill all of us!' - Sudan's defiant protesters
Elsewhere on the BBC
Lyrics quiz
Have you been getting these songs wrong?
Full article Lyrics quiz
Feeling hot
What happens to your body in extreme heat?
Full article Feeling hot
Why you can trust BBC News
BBC News Services
On your mobile
On your connected tv
Get news alerts
Contact BBC News
Explore the BBC
Home
News
Sport
Weather
Shop
Reel
Travel
Capital
Culture
Future
Sounds
CBBC
CBeebies
Food
Bitesize
Arts
Taster
Nature
Local
TV
Radio
Three
Terms of Use
About the BBC
Privacy Policy
Cookies
Accessibility Help
Parental Guidance
Contact the BBC
Get Personalised Newsletters
Advertise with us
Ad choices
Copyright © 2019 BBC. The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read about our approach to external linking.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment