| Rio Tinto looks to hydrogen electrolysers to support Bell Bay smelter and Tasmanian renewables 
 Michael Mazengarb 22 February 2022   1
 
 
  The Bell Bay aluminium smelter (Photo credit: Rio Tinto).
 
 Rio   Tinto has signed a deal with the Tasmania government that secures the   long-term future of the Bell Bay aluminium smelter, and will look to   onsite electrolyers for hydrogen production to boost the demand for new   renewables in the island state.
 
 Under the MoU with the state  government, Rio Tinto has committed to  continue running the Bell Bay  smelter until at least 2030, while it  looks to longer term  arrangements, including a potential expansion of  its smelting  operations.
 
 Rio Tinto has agreed to prepare a business case for  the production of  hydrogen onsite, using electrolysis, with the aim of  replacing exisitng  supplies of fossil gas – and will prepare similar  plans for  incorporating the smelter in a potential demand response  mechanism.
 
 “Rio Tinto will complete business cases for direct  investment in  and/or underwriting of new renewable generation projects  near BBA in  Tasmania,” the MOU says.
 
 Tasmania has unveiled  plans to double its renewable energy capacity –  to 200 per cent  renewables – by 2040, largely through creating load  centres such as  green hydrogen production, or through more contested  ideas  such as the  Marinus Link to Victoria.
 
 “With appropriate commercial  conditions, Rio Tinto will provide load  and demand side flexibility to  support the Marinus business case and  load growth through agreed  mechanisms,” the MoU says.
 
 In return, the Tasmanian government  has committed to facilitating  negotiations with the government owned  utility Hydro Tasmania regarding  the terms of an electricity supply  agreement and the smelter’s potential  participation in demand response  activities.
 
 Aluminium smelters are huge consumers of  electricity, so securing  access to lower cost supplies of power is  crucial to the long-term  viability of any smelter. Most of the smelters  on the mainland, which  rely mostly on coal power, are now looking to  switch to renewables by  the end of the decade, to cut costs and  emissions.
 
 The Bell Bay smelter employs more than 500 local  workers, and the  offer from the Tasmanian government to facilitate  low-cost electricity  supplies will allow the smelter to operate  profitably.
 
 “Aluminium is essential for the global transition to  a low-carbon  economy, and we are excited about the contribution our  Bell Bay smelter  can make both towards this transition and to the  region’s future,” Rio  Tinto chief executive Jakob Stausholm said.
 
 “We  want to help ensure a strong and vibrant future for Bell Bay,  where we  have been part of the community for well over half a century  and where  we are actively working with the Tasmanian Government on a  shared  vision for the future.”
 
 The Tasmanian government has also  commited to undertake work to  identify and incentivise the development  of new generation and  transmission infrastructure in the state, in  support of the state’s  ambitious renewable energy target.
 
 Tasmanian premier Peter Gutwein said the partnership agreement with  Rio  Tinto had the potential to support the creation of new industries  and  expand the state’s renewable energy capacity.
 
 “This MoU is a  strong demonstration of our shared commitment to  Tasmania’s economic  and industrial future and reinforces the State’s  renewable energy  credentials,” Gutwein said.
 
 The Bell Bay industrial precinct has  been a focus of the Tasmanian  government’s plans for growing its green  industries, and the production  of  zero-emissions hydrogen and  ammonia.
 
 “No other jurisdiction in this country is ever going to  get to where  we are, that is to have 100 per cent renewables. So in  terms of  hydrogen, we have very lofty ambitions in terms of ensuring  that we can  develop green hydrogen here in this precinct at Bell Bay,”  Gutwein said.
 
 Oil and gas producer Woodside announced that it had secured land in the Bell Bay region for a proposed green hydrogen and ammonia production facility.
 
 It could eventually see as much as 1.7GW of electrolyser capacity installed near Bell Bay. Fortescue secured a   similar deal for a location in Bell Bay for its own green hydrogen ambitions, as it progresses plans for a 250MW renewable hydrogen facility.
 
 reneweconomy.com.au
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