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Gas Grids Plan £863 Million Hydrogen Project in Northeast England

Gas Grids Plan £863 Million Hydrogen Project in Northeast England

Three grid companies in the U.K. have proposed a 863 million-pound ($1.2 billion) plan to convert the gas network in northeast England to use hydrogen.

Hydrogen could be used to supply 4.4 million households and as many as 39,000 industrial and commercial gas users costing about 13 pounds per household per year, according to a feasibility study for the East Coast Hydrogen project published Tuesday. The project could connect more than 7 gigawatts of production by 2030, exceeding the U.K.’s 5 gigawatt target in a single region. 

Hydrogen could be vital to U.K. efforts to eliminate greenhouse gases by changing the way vehicles are fueled, factories are powered and homes are heated. Government analysis suggests hydrogen could have a pivotal role to play, helping to provide as much as 35% of U.K. energy consumption by 2050. The existing gas grid can be converted to transport the fuel from production sites to consumers.

East Coast Hydrogen can utilize natural gas assets in the North of England, including storage facilities, according to the partners Northern Gas Networks Ltd., Cadent Gas Ltd. and National Grid Plc. 

“This is the first step in the conversion of our national gas grid to hydrogen and will act as a blueprint for subsequent conversions across the U.K.,” according to the report. “We will demonstrate the innovation, engineering capabilities and opportunity in the north and create tens of thousands of highly skilled Green jobs in the future hydrogen economy.”

The project aims to repurpose, where possible, the existing gas grid, which is 20% cheaper than building from scratch.

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.