Jera, ExxonMobil to explore development of hydrogen and ammonia production project in US
JERA, Japan’s top power generator, said on Monday (Mar 25) it has agreed with ExxonMobil to jointly explore the development of a low-carbon hydrogen and ammonia production project in the United States.
ExxonMobil is developing what is expected to be the world’s largest low-carbon hydrogen production plant at its Baytown Complex east of Houston in Texas, with an annual output capacity of about 900,000 tonnes of hydrogen and more than one million tonnes of ammonia. The project aims to start production in 2028.
Under the agreement, Jera may invest in the project and buy about 500,000 tonnes annually of low-carbon ammonia from the project for demand in Japan, it said.
Ammonia is seen as an effective future energy source. It does not emit carbon dioxide when burned, though its production releases emissions if it is made with fossil fuel.
“Cooperation among leading companies is essential to establish supply chains for ammonia, hydrogen, and other products that are key to zero-emission thermal power,” said Steven Winn, Jera’s senior managing executive officer.
Dan Ammann, president of ExxonMobil Low Carbon Solutions, said: “Building world-scale projects for new markets requires supply, demand and supporting regulation to all come together in sync.”
GET BT IN YOUR INBOX DAILY
Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox.
Japan, the world’s fifth-biggest CO2 emitter, has been promoting ammonia as an alternative fuel to help reduce CO2 emissions at coal-fired power plants and other factories.
It aims to grow its demand for ammonia as a fuel to three million tonnes by 2030 as it pushes to achieve its goal of becoming carbon neutral by 2050.
Jera is set to start a trial this week of co-firing 20 per cent of ammonia with coal at its Hekinan thermal power station in central Japan, in what it said will be the world’s first trial using a large amount of the gas at a major commercial plant.
Environmentalists have, however, criticised the move as a way to extend the life of dirty coal-fired power generation. REUTERS
KEYWORDS IN THIS ARTICLE
BT is now on Telegram!
For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to t.me/BizTimes
Energy & Commodities
China takes advantage of cheap gas and coal to rebuild stocks
Nvidia rivals gold as shield against inflation, survey shows
China silver trading powerhouse eyes expansion in Singapore
Gold edges higher as markets count on Fed rate-cut hopes
Chinese companies win more bids to explore for Iraq oil and gas
Why prices for chocolate and cocoa went nuts