When completed, the feasibility study will inform an investment decision in 2010 for a commercial INEOS Bio bio-ethanol and bio-energy plant.
INEOS Bio Chief Executive Officer Peter Williams said: “This is a very exciting project. Converting household organic wastes into bio-fuel and clean energy can deliver very attractive environmental and social benefits to the North East and the UK as a whole. Essentially, our aim is to provide bio-fuel for cars and bio-energy at competitive cost without harming the environment, with very low or zero net carbon emissions and without competing with food production.”
“The challenge now, in the current economic environment, is to commercializes in Europe. In this regard, I would like to express my thanks to One North East, the Department for Energy and Climate Change and the National Non-Food Crop Centre for their considerable support to enable this work to go ahead,” said Williams.
The INEOS Bio process is a combined thermochemical and biochemical technology for the production of bio-ethanol and renewable power from a wide range of low-cost carbon materials, including biodegradable household and industrial wastes. At the heart of the INEOS Bio technology is an anaerobic fermentation step, through which naturally occurring bacteria convert gases derived directly from biomass into bio-ethanol. The process supports high recycling and high landfill diversion rates.
One North East Chief Executive Alan Clarke said: “We are delighted to be making this announcement today, which follows a year of positive discussions between ourselves, the North East Process Industries Cluster, Central Government and INEOS Bio.
“This project offers a very exciting opportunity in the process industries in the Tees Valley, which continues the positive theme of recent investments in this important sector. Biotechnology and biofuels are central to the low carbon future of the process industries, said Clarke.
“This development will be one of the first full-scale demonstrations of these new technologies and will further strengthen the region’s position at the forefront of industrial biotechnology, added Clarke.
“North East England already has the UK’s first Low Carbon Economic Area for Ultra Low Carbon Vehicles. A waste-to-transport biofuel plant will be a significant addition to the new technologies already being advanced here, which also include our electric vehicle charging network and hydrogen fuel,” continued Clarke.
Energy and Climate Change Minister David Kidney said: “This is an important project for DECC, the first of its kind in the UK. If successful, the bio-refinery technologies being demonstrated will play a significant role in helping us meet our ambitious renewable energy targets, as well as reducing waste.
“This is another example of the North East’s leadership on advanced green manufacturing in the UK – providing new low carbon, hi-tech jobs in the region,” said Kidney.
The expansion of the plant built after the feasibility study is over could turn the initial plant into a fully integrated bio-refinery by 2015.