Plans unveiled for £800m carbon capture project at Ferrybridge waste-to-energy plant

UK waste-to-energy operator Enfinium has announced plans to invest £800 million in a carbon capture and storage (CCS) project at its site at Ferrybridge.
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With plans to be operational from 2030, the project would provide the UK with vital carbon removals, decarbonise unrecyclable waste and generate over 90 MW of baseload, homegrown carbon negative power.

The technology will be installed at enfinium’s Ferrybridge 1 and 2 facility in Knottingley.

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Once operational, it would capture around 1.2 million tonnes of carbon dioxide (CO2) every year, including over 600,000 tonnes of durable, high-quality carbon removals – equivalent to taking the carbon emissions of every household in Manchester out of the atmosphere.

The technology will be installed at enfinium’s Ferrybridge facility in West Yorkshire, with plans to be operational by 2030.The technology will be installed at enfinium’s Ferrybridge facility in West Yorkshire, with plans to be operational by 2030.
The technology will be installed at enfinium’s Ferrybridge facility in West Yorkshire, with plans to be operational by 2030.

Around 50 per cent of the unrecyclable waste produced by society is made up of biogenic content including organic material such as waste food, plants and paper, which has already naturally absorbed CO2 from the atmosphere.

With CCS installed, Ferrybridge, the UK’s largest energy from waste site, would become one of the largest carbon removal projects in Europe and support over 200 jobs across the supply chain during the development phase.

The proposals will be put forward for grant support from the UK Government as part of their expansion of the Track-1 cluster sequencing process, due to launch this month. Planning and consenting for the site will move forward in 2024.

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Mike Maudsley, CEO of enfinium, said: “To deliver a net zero carbon economy, the UK needs to find a way to produce carbon removals, or negative emissions, at scale.

"Installing carbon capture at our Ferrybridge site would make it one of Europe’s biggest carbon removal projects. All this while decarbonising unrecyclable waste, diverting it from climate-damaging landfill, and supporting the green economy in West Yorkshire and the wider community.”

Olivia Powis, UK Director of the Carbon Capture and Storage Association, said:"enfinium's planned £800 million investment in CCS at Ferrybridge marks a critical milestone for carbon removal and clean power.

"For the UK to host one of Europe’s largest carbon removal projects, it demonstrates we are really leading the way in our journey towards a net zero future. enfinium's strategic vision has the potential to sustain and create good local jobs and transform the facility in West Yorkshire.”

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