Materials Processing Institute to lead on national green steel hydrogen pilot project
Project will demonstrate green innovation steelmaking in the UK.
The Materials Processing Institute is leading a £270,000 project this summer to demonstrate green steelmaking innovation in the UK.
It will replace coke and other polluting fossil fuels currently powering traditional iron furnaces with hydrogen and electricity to create a low carbon steel industry.
The project – codenamed H2DRI – will focus on how the process can be scaled up and will build practical and scientific understanding on how best to deliver economically and environmentally sustainable green steelmaking.
Part of the government’s Net Zero Innovation Portfolio Industrial Fuel Switching Competition that funds low carbon technologies and systems, the project is led by the Institute in partnership with electrical technology developers C-Tech Innovation, Teesside University, the Steel and Metals Institute at Swansea University, and global metals and mining company Rio Tinto.
In addition, they will collaborate with a larger industrial interest group made up of ironmakers, steelmakers and supply chain businesses, including energy developers.
The initial part of the project will involve a feasibility study before the development of permanent and accessible national pilot production facilities.
Chris McDonald, FIMMM, Chief Executive of the Teesside-based Materials Processing Institute, said, 'The continued reliance on fossil fuels, particularly coal, for much of the world's fresh steel is one of the biggest challenges to decarbonisation. With demand outstripping the availability of steel to recycle, it is critical we transition quickly towards greener methods of production.'
'I’m proud that the Institute, as a national research and innovation centre for the foundation industries, has been selected to lead this ground breaking project that could potentially revive the UK steel industry.'