Environmental capacity for industrial clusters
Investigation into the environmental capacity for deploying carbon capture and hydrogen production decarbonisation technology in key English industrial clusters.
Documents
Details
These documents present findings of government sponsored work in 2021 to 2024 by the Environment Agency (EA) to investigate the environmental capacity to deploy carbon capture and hydrogen production technology in key English industrial clusters.
They include:
- a snapshot view of industry plans at a cluster level
- a full review of evidence on water availability and quality
- a partial review of air quality and the risk of flooding
- impacts that deployment may have on the receiving environment, including habitats
- consideration of how these factors will be influenced by a changing climate
This work focused on the Humber, Teesside and HyNet (Merseyside) industrial clusters due to their sizeable contribution to the UK鈥檚 annual industrial carbon dioxide emissions.
Work in future phases will complete our review of environmental capacity issues in the HyNet industrial cluster by considering air quality.
The findings and recommendations from the reports will help government, industry and regulators to consider and find solutions to the challenges facing the environment from these technologies.
Related projects
Technologies
- Post-combustion carbon dioxide capture: emerging techniques
- Hydrogen production with carbon capture: emerging techniques
- Hydrogen production by electrolysis of water: emerging techniques
Guidance and information related to discharges to water
- Abstraction licensing strategies (catchment abstraction management strategy (CAMS) process) 鈥� find out how much water is available in your area
- Meeting our future water needs: a national framework for water resources
Guidance and information related to discharges to air
- Air emissions risk assessment for your environmental permit
- Environmental permitting: air dispersion modelling reports
- UK Carbon Capture and Storage (UKCCS) Research Community:
- UKCCS Research Community: