The Humber and Teesside join forces to form the East Coast Cluster and decarbonise almost half of UK industrial cluster emissions

The Northern Endurance Partnership (NEP) has today submitted a bid supported by major energy and industrial companies to the Department for Business, Energy & Industrial Strategy’s (BEIS) Cluster sequencing for carbon capture, usage and storage (CCUS) deployment process.

The bid is on behalf of the East Coast Cluster, a collaboration between leading companies from across Teesside and the Humber which aims to advance the government’s world-leading ambition to establish the first ‘net zero’ carbon industrial cluster in the UK by 2040. These two regions account for nearly 50% of all UK industrial cluster emissions.

By decarbonising such a substantial part of the country’s industrial heartlands, the East Coast Cluster plans to support the UK’s leadership in the energy transition and the emerging global low-carbon and hydrogen markets. The project aims to play a major role in levelling up across the country, with the potential to support an average of more than 25,000 jobs a year between 2023 and 2050.

The East Coast Cluster offers a diverse mix of low-carbon projects, including industrial carbon capture, low-carbon hydrogen production, negative emissions power, and power with carbon capture. The companies in the East Coast Cluster have extensive experience in successfully delivering ambitious and world-leading projects.

NEP is developing the common offshore infrastructure that will transport CO2 from industrial emitters in these regions, most of which are Net Zero Teesside and Zero Carbon Humber projects, to secure offshore storage in the Endurance aquifer in the Southern North Sea. Feasibility work on these projects is being co-funded by the UK’s innovation agency, Innovate UK.

In the Queen’s Speech in May 2021, the Government emphasised the importance of levelling-up the UK’s regions. Taking the East Coast Cluster forward is an opportunity, to protect many thousands of existing jobs across Teesside and the Humber, creating thousands of new STEM-based jobs and underpinning new low carbon industries in the north of England. The East Coast Cluster aims to bring together communities, business, industry and academia to deliver the CCUS infrastructure needed to decarbonise these key industrial regions of the UK.

Andy Lane, Managing Director, NEP, said:

“The UK needs to decarbonise industry to reach net zero. Nearly half of all carbon emissions from UK industrial clusters come from the Humber and Teesside, making the East Coast Cluster the single biggest opportunity to decarbonise UK industry.”

“Hundreds of thousands of jobs have relied on the industries which have grown in these regions and the East Coast Cluster, by decarbonising hard-to-abate industries, aims to keep it that way, while developing a platform for UK industry to compete on a global scale.”  

Grete Tveit, Senior Vice President for Low Carbon Solutions at Equinor, which is a partner of ZCH, NZT and NEP said:

“Carbon capture and storage and hydrogen are both crucial technologies for reaching the goals of the Paris Agreement.”

“To deliver them at scale and create real change we need collaboration like never before. And this is what we are doing with our bid to create the East Coast Cluster, working with our partners in the Humber, Teesside and the Northern Endurance Partnership. We can deliver deep decarbonisation of these major industrial regions and help the UK’s journey to net zero, safeguard jobs and develop world-leading industries.”

Andy Benjamin, Director of CCUS, National Grid Ventures, said:

“The East Coast Cluster offers the scale and diversity to protect and create tens of thousands of jobs across the Humber and Teesside for decades to come, while building a solid foundation to re-establish the region as a globally-competitive climate-friendly hub for industry and innovation.”

Emma Hardy, MP for Hull West and Hessle, said:

“In the Humber we have many world-leading industries that are looking to cut their emissions to remain competitive in the transition to net zero. The collaboration between the Humber and Teesside in the East Coast Cluster will futureproof both industrial regions, tackle half of the UK’s cluster emissions, and create new high-skill, low-carbon jobs for our people.”

“Progressing the East Coast Cluster would show the UK is backing its climate ambitions with actions.”

Ben Houchen, Tees Valley Mayor, said:

“The success of this project is not only crucial for achieving net zero, but also a way of ensuring good-quality, well-paid jobs are supported across Teesside, Darlington and Hartlepool for generations to come.”

“The Net Zero Teesside project, which is joining other clean energy initiatives at Teesworks, will position our region as a leader in innovation and the sector. I’m pleased that we can work with our neighbours in the Humber to deliver an even more positive impact for the whole UK.”

Beckie Hart, CBI Yorkshire & the Humber Director, said:

“Decarbonising industry will be a huge challenge, but one which offers major rewards, including an opportunity to position the UK as a global leader on the path to net-zero.

“CCUS and hydrogen technology must play a major part if the UK is to meet its ambitious climate targets, and it is vital to accelerate delivery on these issues.

“Communities which get this right can benefit from new jobs and increased skills, while helping to lay the foundations for a healthier and more sustainable future.”

Jonathan Oxley, Humber Cluster Plan Manager, said:

“The Humber Industrial Cluster Plan aims to develop a roadmap for the significant decarbonisation of industry in the Humber by 2030 and attain Net Zero by 2040.  This is a collaborative endeavour, involving public and private sector partners, and we recognise the benefits in developing cooperative links with other Clusters across the UK.

“With the potential for a shared transport and storage system through the Northern Endurance Partnership and the proximity of the Teesside and Humber estuaries, this is an opportunity to further develop synergies between Net Zero Teesside and the Humber across shared infrastructure, skills and supply chain opportunities.” 

James Newman, Chair of HEY LEP, said:

“As Hull and East Yorkshire is part of the UK’s largest industrial cluster, the Humber region, we are committed to lowering emissions and building a net-zero economy. We are thrilled to see this partnership taking place not just across our closest neighbours, but across a large swathe of the North of England, with the potential to make a huge impact to the country’s overall CO2 emissions. We cannot reach our climate change goals without large-scale and wide-reaching projects such as this, involving organisations across the private and public sector.”