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December
2019

When cutting down trees leads to decarbonisation

Added: 30.12.2019 20:38:06 Views count: 2412

When cutting down trees leads to decarbonisation The first carbon negative company of its kind ...

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Drax secures £500,000 for innovative fu...

EREVITA Team, 1.1.2020 18:30:37

Drax secures £500,000 for innovative fuel cell carbon capture study Drax Group will explore the feasibility of using molten carbonate fuel cells as a technology for capturing carbon dioxide (CO2) having secured £500,000 of funding from the UK Government. 27th June 2019 Fuel cell FEED study to assess the feasibility of building a second carbon capture pilot at Drax Power Station will help position the UK as a world leader in the fight against climate change The technology used will produce power at the same time as capturing carbon dioxide from Drax’s flue gases Neighbouring horticultural site will use the CO2 to improve yields and demonstrate how businesses working together in clusters can deliver climate solutions Th government funding will be used to explore using FuelCell Energy’s molten carbon fuel cell to generate electricity whilst capturing CO2 from the flue gases produced during the combustion of biomass for renewable power generation at Drax.

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Lubomir, 17.10.2021 09:14:28

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A pilot bioenergy with carbon capture an...

EREVITA Team, 29.6.2020 17:15:56

A pilot bioenergy with carbon capture and storage (BECCS) project is to take place in a partnership between Drax and Mistubishi Heavy Industries Engineering (MHI). The new facility is to be installed at Drax Power Station in the autumn, with MHI’s carbon capture technology set to capture around 300kg CO2 per day during the 12-month pilot. Will Gardiner, CEO of Drax, lauded the company’s plans to develop “ground-breaking” BECCS at the site as a way of helping to boost the UK economy following the COVID-19 pandemic. Increasingly there have been calls for a green recovery, focused on climate issues as well as rebuilding the economy, with Gardiner stating developing BECCS will support the development of a zero carbon industrial cluster in the Humber. These, he continued, will deliver clean growth and “protect thousands of jobs”. The Zero Carbon Humber project is looking to create the world’s first net zero carbon industrial cluster by 2040, with the potential to capture and store around 10% of UK carbon dioxide emissions per year. It recently saw Centrica Storage, SSE Thermal, Uniper, Associated British Ports, Phillips 66, px Group, Saltend Cogeneration Company and VPI-Immingham join the project. Drax predicts that implementing BECCS at its North Yorkshire site could deliver 16 tonnes of negative emissions a year and protect 55,000 jobs. Gardiner also lauded the collaboration with MHI as moving Drax closer to its ambitions of being a carbon negative company by 2030, a target it announced at the end of last year. The pilot is to test two of MHI’s proprietary solvents. One of these, dubbed KS-1 Solvent, is being used at 13 commercial plants delivered by MHI already. The other - KS-21 Solvent - has been newly developed and is designed to achieve “significant performance improvements and cost savings”. Kenji Terasawa, president and CEO of Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Engineering, said: “We are very proud to be a part of the BECCS pilot project with Drax. We firmly believe that our carbon capture technology would be able to contribute to the UK’s zero carbon targets in a material way.”

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