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KENT APPOINTED AS FEED CONTRACTOR FOR SIX GRENIAN HYDROGEN PROJECTS IN UK
Kent has been appointed as FEED contractor for Progressive Energy, Statkraft and Foresight’s joint venture Grenian Hydrogen’s six green hydrogen production sites in the UK.
Based within the HyNet cluster in northwest England and North Wales, all of the six projects will incorporate PEM electrolysers, ranging between 10-30MW of production capacity for 100% fuel switching or blending co-located at the Protos Energy Park, St. Helens, Stretford, Middlewich and Winnington.
Launched in late May (2023), Grenian boasts an initial development portfolio of 200MWe across seven projects, six of which have received funding from the UK Government’s Net Zero Hydrogen Fund (NZHF) and Hydrogen business model.
Kent was awarded a single front-end engineering and design (FEED) study in April 2023 to cover all six sites to develop an AACE class 3 estimate needed to allow final investment decisions (FIDs) to be made.
“The DESNZ funding requirements impose a strict budget and tight timescale, but Kent will achieve all the project requirements utilising our inhouse hydrogen technology expertise built up over decades of early design and FEED work on hydrogen developments, including HyNet,” said Matt Wills, Market Director Low Carbon at Kent.
Wills continued, “We are delighted to be working with the Grenian Hydrogen team to develop a standardised design and layout that offers cost savings through replicability for the portfolio of projects. This cluster of projects is a huge step forward for the future viability of green hydrogen, and we are proud to play our part.” agr.com
Aside from the above projects, at its launch, Grenian said it has submitted bids for government funding to support engineering work for two larger “mini cluster” projects in Wrexham and Speke, planned to supply users via a local pipeline network which could connect into a larger hydrogen network being developed by Cadent for Hy Net.
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Network of geothermal power stations
‘could help level up UK’
Many of Britain’s poorest towns are in areas with greatest potential for renewable energy, says report which will use water from mineshafts to heat 1,500 new homes and a scheme at the Eden project in Cornwall which generates heat to warm Eden’s rainforest and Mediterranean biomes as well as offices, kitchens and greenhouses.
In theory, the UK has enough geothermal energy trapped underground to heat every home for a hundred years. Even by conservative estimates that account for realistic commercial and logistical limits, geothermal energy could help the UK to cut its imports of fossil fuels and rely only on the North Sea for its gas.
Anetwork of underground geothermal plants is being touted as a way to help level up the UK after a report discovered many areas with the greatest geothermal potential lie beneath the towns and cities most in need of investment.
Areas that have been earmarked by the government as part of its levelling up agenda are about three times as likely to be rich in untapped energy from the earth, according to an academic study commissioned by No 10.
The University of Durham found these include Redcar and Cleveland, Middlesbrough, East Lindsey, Hartlepool, Northumberland and Bassetlaw, which all appear in the top 10 of the index used by government to identify local authority areas in need of levelling up.
Other areas well-suited to producing geothermal heat and electricity include Newcastle upon Tyne, North East Derbyshire, the East Riding of Yorkshire and Nottingham.
Harnessing geothermal energy involves drilling a borehole to depths of about two to three miles, to flow cold water at low pressures through the hot rocks beneath the Earth’s surface. A second borehole returns the warm water to the surface where it can be used to heat homes and businesses or generate electricity.
Kieran Mullan MP, who was tasked with producing the report, said the “strong overlap” between areas in need of investment and the best geothermal locations was unexpected, but it could provide another reason for the government to look again at supporting the renewable energy technology.
“Unlike wind or solar this technology provides baseload – it is there constantly. And our expertise in drilling in the North Sea means we are well placed to motor ahead,” Mullan said.
The UK’s early steps into geothermal energy include a project in Seaham, County Durham,
“But we have catching up to do because across Europe there has been much stronger government intervention to support nascent deep geothermal industries in those countries,” Mullan said.
Deep geothermal energy is abundant in Iceland owing to its unique geology but countries in western Europe are increasingly using geothermal energy to help produce green heating.

Already more than 250,000 homes in Paris rely on geothermal heating and the German government has committed to spending €1bn (£860m) before 2035 to create 100 geothermal projects.
Rishi Sunak said the report would help the government decide whether there was a bigger role for deep geothermal energy in the UK economy.
“We have made rapid progress on switching to homegrown renewable electricity and have made energy security a key priority. Success is going to depend on pulling all the levers at our disposal,” the prime minister said.