Fortescue plans Australia’s first major green ammonia plant near Brisbane
   Giles Parkinson 
  11 October 2021  6  
 
   
  Courtesy of NextTracker
  Andrew  Forrest’s Fortescue future Industries has unveiled yet another major  renewable hydrogen project, this time a proposed 50,000 tonne a year  green hydrogen and ammonia facility near Brisbane, which promises to be  the first of its scale in Australia.
  The plan was announced  jointly with fertiliser supplier Incitec Pivot, which currently uses  natural gas as a feedstock at its Gibson Island facility near Brisbane,  but is now looking to build an on-site electrolysis plant.
  FFI and  Incitec say the switch to renewables, if successful, will safeguard  several hundred manufacturing jobs in Queensland that are under threat  from soaring gas prices, and the demand for low carbon products.
  They say that the green ammonia could also provide a low-carbon fuel supply to the Port of Brisbane and Brisbane airport.
  The  announcement comes one day after Forrest announced plans for a massive  green energy manufacturing centre near Gladstone, in central Queensland,  t hat could build hydrogen electrolysers and expand into wind turbines, solar PV cells, and cabling.
  It also comes after  FFI announced late last week an investment in Dutch solar PV and hydrogen technology provider HyET that could result in a 1GW solar PV manufacturing plant being built in Australia.
  Forrest’s  plans for a green hydrogen revolution are bold – 15 million tonnes of  green hydrogen per year by 2030, rising to 50 million tonnes in the  decade thereafter – and the new announcements are now starting to put  meat on those plans, although it has still not revealed where the vast  resources of wind and solar power will be sourced.
  “FFI’s plan is to turn regional Australia into the global green energy heart,” Forrest said in a statement.
  “This  project will create Australia’s first green ammonia industry and will  enable the decarbonisation of some of the hardest-to-decarbonise parts  of industry, like cargo ships and iron ore bulk carriers.
  “Not  only will this create more jobs, but it will prove that existing  infrastructure can be retrofitted to generate a zero-emissions energy  source.”
  Incitec  Pivot managing director Jeanne Johns said the project could sustain  highly skilled manufacturing jobs at Gibson Island and allow the company  to leverage its existing capabilities and assets to create a “thriving  renewable hydrogen ecosystem in Australia in the near term.”
  Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk said momentum was building in Queensland’s quest to becoming a renewable hydrogen superpower.
  “Yesterday  we announced we’re building the world’s largest electrolyser  manufacturing plant in Central Queensland which is crucial for making  hydrogen,” the said.
  “Today Fortescue Future Industries and  Incitec Pivot have committed to a joint feasibility study into  conducting a green hydrogen and green ammonia production and export  facility right here at Gibson Island.
  “By backing Queensland to  become a renewable energy and hydrogen superpower we will make  Queensland a manufacturing superpower as well which will create and  sustain jobs long into the future.
  “We are seeing an industrial  green revolution taking place in Queensland, and it will happen in  Australia and throughout the world.”
  reneweconomy.com.au |