UK-based Prax Group has joined a project seeking to reduce carbon emissions from energy intensive industries in the Humber region of northeast England. As part of the initiative, the firm is targeting the capture of 1.1mn t/yr of CO2 from its 109,000 b/d Lindsey refinery in Lincolnshire by 2027-29.
The project, known as the V Net Zero Humber Cluster, is led by North Sea-focused oil and gas producer Harbour Energy. Besides Prax, its other members comprise US firm Phillips 66's 230,000 b/d Killingholme refinery, which is close to Lindsey, as well as trading firm Vitol's 1.2GW combined heat and power plant in nearby Immingham and power generation firm EP UK Investments.
The V Net Zero Humber Cluster seeks to transport the CO2 emitted at the various facilities by pipeline for storage in the depleted Viking gas field complex in the North Sea off the Lincolnshire coast. Production at Viking stopped in 2016 and Harbour Energy is in the final stages of decommissioning the field.
Prax's initial target is to capture 1.1mn/yr of CO2 from the Lindsey refinery's heaters and process units, with Harbour Energy in charge of transportation and storage. "This project is likely to be implemented in two phases — the first in 2027 and the second phase will follow in 2029," Prax said.
The move is part of Prax's commitment to develop sustainable strategies for Lindsey. The firm completed the acquisition of the refinery from TotalEnergies earlier this year.
The UK government in March this year announced the allocation of £171mn ($236mn) of funding from its industrial decarbonisation challenge scheme as part of its overall industrial decarbonisation strategy. Some £12mn of that was awarded to Humber Zero, a partnership between the Killingholme refinery and the Immingham power plant. A further £21mn went to the Zero Carbon Humber Partnership project, which includes a hydrogen plant and hydrogen and CO2 pipelines.
By Caroline Varin