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https://decc.blog.gov.uk/2015/09/09/teesside-industry-shows-its-metal-on-tackling-climate-change/

Teesside industry shows its metal on tackling climate change

Posted by: , Posted on: - Categories: Carbon Capture and Storage, Low carbon

Redcar Blast Furnace
Redcar Blast Furnace
It might surprise you to hear the operator of the second largest blast furnace in Europe and one of the UK’s top five highest emitters, is pushing for more action on climate change. But that’s exactly what SSI Steel and other energy-intensive companies in Teesside were doing in Westminster in July at the launch of our blueprint for a clean industrial future in the UK.

Alongside BOC, Lotte Chemical UK, GrowHow and others we make up Teesside Collective, a cluster of industries determined to establish Europe’s first Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) equipped industrial zone. Funded by DECC and advised by the best experts in CCS, we’ve now finished the business case, initial engineering studies and economic analysis for a shared pipeline network to capture, transport and permanently store emissions under the North Sea.

And it’s looking promising. The initial phase, which could be up and running by 2024, would capture 2.8 million tonnes of carbon per year - that’s a quarter of Teesside’s emissions and almost 60% of the Committee on Climate Change’s suggested deployment of industrial CCS by 2030. It would support 1,200 jobs in construction and help retain 5,900 jobs in our firms and supply chains.

Other Teesside industries would later be able to plug in, as would new plants attracted to the area by the infrastructure. An expanded network could capture and store up to 15 million tonnes of carbon per year by 2035 – more than all of Teesside’s current emissions and almost half of the Committee on Climate Change’s suggested deployment of industrial CCS by 2050. It would also create an additional 2,600 jobs in Tees Valley, £2bn in gross value added and £1.2bn in new exports.

As DECC’s Minister Lord Bourne said at our launch, “The market for chemical, plastic and steel is changing. Consumers are increasingly demanding low carbon products. The work Teesside Collective is doing is an important step in making the economic case…bottom line is these projects must be made commercially viable. ”.

This is a something that’s really driving Teesside Collective. My colleagues at Lotte Chemical have been told by Britvic Plc, for whom they provide the polyester resin for billions of drinks bottles each year that “Suppliers who account for their emissions in a credible way will present a fundamentally more attractive proposition in relation to their rivals”. Cleaner industry definitely makes better business sense.

The environmental agenda is no longer about the greens versus industry as it was in the past. Our launch underlined the broad coalition of support for our project, which has been welcomed in equal measure by WWF, the Committee on Climate Change, the CBI, EEF and many others.

Our industries face intense international competition day in day out and the nature of our processes are such that significant CO2 reduction simply cannot be achieved without CCS regardless of carbon price. But we also have our sights set on a longer term prize. The direction of travel on carbon reduction here in the UK and, increasingly, in rival economies is irreversible. Even before we know the outcome of December’s UN talks, it’s clear to Teesside Collective that the smartest firms are those who take steps first to reduce their exposure to carbon penalties. And grab valuable clean industry market share in the process.

Check out Teesside Collective’s time travelling video at: http://www.teessidecollective.co.uk/project/teesside-in-2030/

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  1. Comment by ian greenwood STEERglobal for Sustainability in Trade Environment Education and Resources posted on

    what happens to the CO 2 and how can it be permanently assured it will not further acidify the oceans?