| BP takes major position in one of world’s biggest green hydrogen hubs in Pilbara 
 Giles Parkinson 15 June 2022   3
 
 
  
 Source: BP corporate video.
 
 Oil  giant BP has taken a 40.5 per cent stake in the $30 billion  Australian  Renewable Energy Hub in the Pilbara, one of the biggest  renewable and  green hydrogen projects in the world.
 
 BP will use its massive  balance sheet and big project know-how to  advance the project, which  proposes a combined 26GW of wind and solar to  create green ammonia for  export and shipping fuels, and green hydrogen  for the domestic market.
 
 The transaction, first flagged last month, is one of the most   significant to date in Australia – and indeed in the world’s transition   to green energy – and it involves a major reshuffling of shareholdings   in the project.
 
 Australian-based founding shareholder CWP  Global will see its stake  reduced to 17.8 per cent, Macquarie’s Green  Investment Group will emerge  with a slightly bigger stake of 15.3 per  cent, while InterContinental  Energy, another co-founder will have a  26.4 per cent stake.
 
 “The race to green energy is on,” says Alex  hewitt, the chair of CWP  Global which is also developing the even  bigger 50GW Western Green  Energy Hub in Western Australia and has a  pipeline of 140GW of projects.
 
 “Recent months have demonstrated  the uncertainty and disruption that comes with over-reliance on fossil  fuels.  Green  hydrogen is a critical pathway for enhancing energy  security and  decarbonising hard-to-abate sectors, like mining,  steel-making and  long-range shipping.”
 
 Hewitt says AREH is  clearly the company’s most advanced project and  finding a like minded  oil and gas major is crucial to turn the project  into reality.
 
 “By partnering with bp, we bring in a new level of engineering  know-how  and technical expertise, a track record of developing large and   complex projects in remote locations, and deep experience in trading   energy products globally,” he said.
 
 Hewitt told RenewEconomy  that the partners had approached a number of  big oil giants, but bp  stood out as the most forward looking on green  energy.
 
 BP is  looking to use AREH to supply some of its own electricity  needs, and  grab a significant part of the emerging green hydrogen  market.
 
 At  full scale AREH could produce 1.6 million tonnes of green hydrogen  or 9  million tonnes of green ammonia per annum – making it one the  largest  green hydrogen projects in the world. It will also take up a lot  of  space, with the wind and solar farms spread over 6,500 square kms of   land of the Nyangumarta people.
 
 Financial close is expected in 2024, subject to approvals, with the first production in 2026.
 
 Bp says the Pilbara is a good site because it has large expanses of   land, good wind and solar resources, and capacity for major mining and   manufacturing industries.
 
 At full capacity, AREH is expected to  abate around 17 million tonnes  of carbon in domestic and export markets  annually, which would equate to  roughly 0.5 gigatonnes (Gt) of carbon  savings over the lifetime of the  project.
 
 By contrast, the  controversial Scarborough gas field proposed by  Woodside petroleum is  expected to produce 0.8 gigatonnes of Co2,  although analysts say the  real number of that project is a lot higher.
 
 “AREH is set to be  one of the largest renewable and green hydrogen  energy hubs in the  world and can make a significant contribution to  Australia and the  wider Asia Pacific region’s energy transition, ” said  Anja-Isabel  Dotzenrath, bp’s executive vice president of gas and low  carbon energy.
 
 “  It truly reflects what integrated energy is – combining  solar and  onshore wind power with hydrogen production and using it to  help  transform sectors and regions.
 
 “It also reflects our belief that  Australia has the potential to be a  powerhouse in the global energy  transition, benefitting from both its  existing infrastructure and  abundant renewable energy resources.
 
 Bp intends to use the  project to assist its clients in the  Asia-Pacific, particularly Japan  and South Korea, to lower emissions,  and as a significant source of  renewable generating capacity.
 
 WA’s hydrogen minister Alannah  MacTiernan said bp’s commitment to the  Asian Renewable Energy Hub is a  significant vote of confidence for the  next stage of development of the  WA renewable hydrogen industry.
 
 ”The project will transform the  Pilbara, create thousands of jobs and  be a major contributor to global  efforts to decarbonise the economy,  and provide the low-cost energy to  underpin downstream processing of our  mineral wealth,” she said in a  statement.
 
 reneweconomy.com.au
 
 My comments:
 
 The beginning of the end for FF's.
 
 Eric
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