Offshore wind to methanol | Engie and partners to combine 1.85GW of green hydrogen with captured CO2
Previously announced HyNetherlands project has been reshaped to produce green methanol, which ‘will help lower Europe’s reliance on imported natural gas’
The HyNetherlands (HyNL) project — which was announced last October as a pure green hydrogen play — will initially see Engie building a 100MW electrolyser in 2025 in Eemshaven, which will use 200MW of offshore wind to split water molecules into hydrogen and oxygen.
The Engie and OCI plants will be connected to a hydrogen network being developed in the Netherlands and northern Germany by local gas distributor Gasunie.
The French utility says it plans expand HyNL’s electrolyser capacity from 100MW to 1.85GW in the early 2030s.
“Obtaining the necessary financial support and government approvals for the project are key priorities,” the company said in a statement. “To this end, the project has already applied for grants from the European authorities (Innovation Fund).”
Ahmed El-Hoshy, CEO of OCI, said: “‘Methanol is one of the most effective green hydrogen carriers and will be key to the development of the hydrogen economy in the Netherlands and Europe. The flexibility of OCI’s production assets to switch to green hydrogen can enable expedited and scalable industry decarbonisation and will simultaneously help lower Europe’s reliance on imported natural gas.”
Cedric Osterrieth, managing director of Engie Thermal Europe, added: “The HyNL roadmap paves the way towards an effective European renewable energy hub and will offer a decarbonisation solution to multiple industry sectors with a high carbon footprint.”