The UK government has awarded £26m to nine companies to advance carbon capture, utilisation and storage (CCUS) technology in support of its ambition of being a world leader in the field.
The project will be officially announced today by energy and clean growth minister Chris Skidmore MP at the Tata Chemicals Europe (TCE) plant in Winnington, Cheshire, where the UK’s largest-ever CCUS facility will be built with £4.2m from the fund.
Tata says the project will remove 40,000 tonnes of CO2 from the atmosphere each year when it becomes operational in 2021, equivalent to 22,000 cars being taken off the road. This is 100 times more CO2 than the country’s current largest plant.
Skidmore tweeted: “On the day that I signed net-zero by 2050 into law, looking forward to travelling up to visit the carbon capture facility to formally announce our latest support for CCUS this afternoon, our investment in meeting our new commitment begins today.”
TCE managing director Martin Ashcroft added: “The CCU demonstration plant will enable us to reduce our carbon emissions, whilst securing supplies of a critical raw material, helping to grow the export of our products across the world.
“We hope that this project will demonstrate the viability of CCU and pave the way for further applications of the technology to support the decarbonisation of industrial activity. This project is a great example of business and Government working together to rise to the challenge of decarbonising industrial production.”
Tata also tweeted: “We’ve unveiled plans to build the UK’s first industrial-scale Carbon Capture & Utilisation Plant. Reducing carbon dioxide emissions and providing a crucial raw material used in our high-grade sodium bicarbonate.”