| From black coal to ‘sunshine gas:’ CS Energy backs major green hydrogen project 
 Sophie Vorrath 30 November 2022   0
 
 
 
   
 Queensland  government-owned utility CS Energy has thrown its weight  behind plans  to develop a green hydrogen and ammonia production and  export facility  in North Queensland, in a bid to fast-track the project  dubbed HyNQ.
 
 HyNQ, or North Queensland Energy Project, has been in the works since   2020, led by Australian renewable hydrogen hopeful Energy Estate with   the ultimate goal of developing a global-scale green ammonia facility.
 
 The company says it has now signed a consortium of “globally recognised partners” to take the project to its next stage.
 
 The consortium includes Idemitsu Australia, a subsidiary of Japan oil   giant Idemitsu Kosan, and – perhaps most significantly for this   particular project – CS Energy, a state-owned electricity generator that   is making the shift from coal to renewables.
 
 Energy Estate  says its new project partners will help to progress a  study on the  feasibility of generating and exporting green ammonia from  the Port of  Abbot Point near Bowen – traditionally a coal export port.
 
 The  company says one of the key goals of the project is to harness  existing  infrastructure and to draw on the existing experienced energy  export  workforce and supply chain of North Queensland.
 
 “Bringing  together a group of highly respected energy companies, each  focused  both on the domestic opportunities for Queensland and key  export  markets of Japan and Korea will help accelerate the potential of  HyNQ, a  project leaning-in to the opportunity for the export  of  ‘sunshine  gas’,” says Energy Estate co-founder Vincent Dwyer.
 
 The first  job of the consortium will be to fund the ongoing pre-FEED  (front end  engineering design) activities, Dwyer says, and if those  results are  successful, to start scoping out technical issues and  estimating rough  investment costs.
 
 Idemitsu Australia chief Steve Kovac says the  feasibility studies are  a critical step to deliver a pathway for green  hydrogen and ammonia  production in the state.
 
 “This is another  major opportunity for North Queensland as we  continue to build  low-carbon and decarbonisation businesses and pave the  way for  Australia’s energy transition,” Kovac says.
 
 For Queensland Labor,  having a hand in the project via CS Energy  builds on the government’s  own green hydrogen ambitions, and its rapidly  evolving energy  transition plans, which were comprehensively updated in  September with  its Energy and Jobs Plan.
 
 “This is another vote of confidence  from our trading partners  following the release of our  first-of-its-kind in Australia report  highlighting Queensland’s  capacity to produce and export renewable  hydrogen,” said state energy  minister Mick de Brenni on Wednesday.
 
 “From our hydrogen  superhighway and hydrogen training facilities to  electrolyser  manufacturing and export capabilities, we’re setting  Queensland’s  economy up to power the world’s future.”
 
 Last year, the  Queensland government owned Stanwell Corporation –  also traditionally  focused on coal power generation – revealed it was  leading a consortium  of Australian and Japanese companies to investigate  the feasibility of  a renewable hydrogen export facility in Gladstone.
 
 On   that project,   Stanwell is partnering with the Japanese Iwatani Corporation, which   will examine the feasibility of establishing a facility to produce up to   36,500 tonnes of renewable hydrogen a year and begin exporting as  early  as 2026.
 
 Also in Gladstone,   plans got underway   in April of this year on a green hydrogen hub with the capacity for  3GW  of electrolysis and the production of up to 5,000 tonnes a day of  green  ammonia, powered by new-build solar and wind resources.
 
 That project is being developed by Australia-based multinational  Orica  and H2U Group, who are working on a first stage of the  multi-billion  industrial-scale H2-Hub, underpinned by a MoU to explore a  green  ammonia offtake and supply deal.
 
 More recently – just a couple of weeks ago – the Palaszczuk government   announced plans   to develop the North Queensland Super Hub, led by Andrew Forrest’s   Fortescue Future Industries and his recently acquired renewables   developer Windlab.
 
 The government said at the time that detailed  planning was already  underway for the Super Hub, with the first stage  to include Windlab’s  proposed 800MW Prairie Wind Farm and a 1GW  “Wongalee project,” the  details of which were not specified.
 
 “For the first time, the North Queensland Super Hub will provide the   quantity of green energy we need to support large-scale green hydrogen   production right here in Queensland,” said FFI CEO Mark Hutchinson of   the project.
 
 For Energy Estate, HyNQs is just one of the company’s proposed green hydrogen projects in Australia, including its   plans to develop a 1.6GW renewable hydrogen production, transportation and export hub in the New South Wales Hunter region.
 
 In May, the company revealed plans to develop   a “world first” super-hybrid green hydrogen project   valued at up to $5.5 billion and combining massive wind and pumped   hydro facilities and hydrogen technologies in central Queensland.
 
 The Flavian super hybrid project, on which Energy Estate is  partnering  with Sunshine Hydro, proposes up to 1.8GW of new wind  generation and  600MW of pumped hydro, 300MW of hydrogen electrolysers,  50MW of  liquefaction, and a 50MW hydrogen fuel cell.
 
 In offshore wind, Energy Estate is   partnering with Spanish firm BlueFloat Energy   on plans to develop of at least 4,300MW of offshore wind capacity in   Australian waters, including a 1.4GW floating wind farm off the coast of   the Hunter region and a 1.6GW project off the coast of Wollongong.
 
 Getting shovels into the ground on all of these ambitious plans will   be the big test. On HyNQ, Energy Estate says it hopes to complete   pre-FEED activities in the second half of 2023 and, if all goes well,   get to a final investment decision in late 2024, early 2025, with hydrogen and ammonia production in 2027/2028.
 
 reneweconomy.com.au
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