A Vision for Hydrogen in the Tees Valley details how the area can become globally significant in the production, consumption and export of low carbon hydrogen, while supporting emerging carbon capture, utilisation and storage initiatives and safeguarding and creating thousands of high-quality jobs.
By 2040, the report sees hydrogen supporting the Tees Valley’s aim to become one of the world’s first decarbonised industrial clusters, helping to accelerate the UK’s overarching 2050 net zero goal.
Leading organisations operating in the region are already showing their commitment to new low carbon hydrogen production projects – with many businesses using it to decarbonise their operations. New production projects could see at least 2.5GW of hydrogen production capacity in Teesside by 2030.
This is a quarter of the government’s ambition for 10GW of low carbon hydrogen production by the end of the decade, which was recently doubled from 5GW. This shows that the essential elements for a whole-system hydrogen “SuperPlace” are already at the heart of the area.
Capitalising on these strengths will support the production and local use of hydrogen as a fuel and feedstock for current and new industries and businesses, helping them to decarbonise, adapt, grow, and thrive.
It could also play a central role in accelerating the use of the fuel in transport and help position Teesside as the UK’s Hydrogen Transport Hub.
The report has been developed by a consortium of key stakeholders consisting of the Tees Valley Mayor and Combined Authority, Arup, bp, Kellas Midstream and Northern Gas Networks (NGN), the driving forces behind innovative projects in the sector.