Uniper partners with GE to convert Euro gas-fired fleet with carbon-free hydrogen

744 Last modified by the author on 23/07/2020 - 10:00
Uniper partners with GE to convert Euro gas-fired fleet with carbon-free hydrogen

Global power generator Uniper will work with General Electric on a long-term goal of decarbonizing the utility’s gas-fired power plants and gas storage facilities.

GE Gas Power and Uniper will explore, assess and develop technology options for the gas-fired units. Those options include a wider use of carbon-free hydrogen in GE turbines and compressors at Uniper power plants.

The initial focus will be on the power generator’s gas-fired stations in the United Kingdom and elsewhere in Europe. The companies’ joint working group hopes to produce a detailed decarbonization roadmap by early 2021. 

“In a few years, Uniper’s European fleet will consist mainly of climate-friendly gas-fired power plants and CO2-free hydropower,” Andreas Schierenbeck, CEO of Uniper, said in a statement. “From now on, our investments will focus primarily on the further decarbonization of the gas assets which could include post-combustion carbon capture, utilization and sequestration, as well as blue or green hydrogen. And here, clean hydrogen will, as far as it is possible and sensible, replace the fossil components of the gas plants.”

Uniper’s generation fleet already has produced 24 TWh of carbon-free electricity through its hydroelectric and nuclear power plants in Germany and Sweden. The company is aiming for carbon-neutrality of the European generation business by 2035.

U.S.-based GE has worked with the German-based energy firm for decades, including at the power stations of Grain and Connah’s Quay in the UK and Etzel and Epe gas storage facilities in Germany. 

“We are honored to work with Uniper to deliver reliable, affordable and sustainable decarbonization technologies for their entire GE gas asset base,” GE Gas Power CEO Scott Strazik said. “We look forward to utilizing our 80-plus years of gas turbine development experience—including six million operating hours with low-BTU fuels—to make Uniper’s decarbonization vision a reality.”

Uniper owns about 34 GW of installed power capacity and operates in 40 countries. It also is working with Siemens on a hydrogen-utilization strategy in Europe.

All of the world’s major power generation equipment manufacturers are researching and testing ways to make hydrogen a larger part of the gas-fired turbine mix. Those include Siemens, Mitsubishi, Ansaldo, Cummins and MAN.

 

News published on Renewable Energy World 

Photo credit : Photo courtesy GE.

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