Tuesday, November 10, 2020

Wind Major Ørsted and Hydrocarbon Major BP Strike up Green Hydrogen Partnership in Germany

 From Offshore Energy, November 10:

Ørsted and the multinational oil and gas major bp have agreed to jointly develop a potential large-scale renewable hydrogen project in Germany powered by offshore wind.

The project, which is expected to be operational in 2024, will comprise a 50 MW electrolyser system installed at bp’s Lingen Refinery in North West Germany.

The electrolyser, powered by an Ørsted North Sea offshore wind farm, will be capable of generating almost 9,000 tonnes of renewable hydrogen a year.

The project is also intended to support a longer-term ambition to build more than 500 MW of renewable hydrogen capacity at Lingen. This could provide renewable hydrogen to both meet all the refinery’s hydrogen demand and provide feedstock for future synthetic fuel production.

“Heavy industries such as refineries use large quantities of hydrogen in their manufacturing processes,” Martin Neubert, Executive Vice President for Ørsted, said.

”They will continue to need hydrogen, but replacing the currently fossil-based hydrogen with hydrogen produced from renewable energy can help these industries dramatically lower their CO2 footprint. But first, renewable hydrogen has to become cost competitive with fossil-based hydrogen, and for that we need projects such as this with bp’s Lingen refinery which will demonstrate the electrolyser technology at large scale and showcase real-life application of hydrogen based on offshore wind.”

Besides the green hydrogen production itself, the project is additionally focusing on maximizing the efficiency of the electrolyser system and allowing flexible operation and complete integration into the refinery....

....MORE

Previously on Ørsted:
Wind Power Biggie Ørsted to Power Yara Green Ammonia Plant
"Germany okays funding for major green hydrogen project"
"Ørsted Bets Hydrogen Is Key to Climate Goals"
Denmark's Ørsted to Pay Glencore to Take Ørsted's LNG Business
Maybe Bayer can use this kind of financial wizardry to get rid of Monsanto.