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Storm clouds over Tata Steel in IJmuiden? Photo: Depositphotos.com |
Amsterdam’s port authority,
Tata Steel and former AkzoNobel chemical division Nouryon are planning to build
a hydrogen plant on the site of the Tata industrial complex in IJmuiden, Dutch
media report.
The final decision will be taken in 2021 and building will take
another two to three years.
The plant will produce 15,000 tonnes of hydrogen a
year which Tata will use to produce steel in a cleaner and more sustainable
way.
The move would reduce CO2 emissions by Tata by 350,000 tonnes which equals
the CO2 emissions of 40,000 households. At the moment, Tata produces 6 mega
tonnes of CO2, which makes it one of the most polluting industrial complexes in
the Netherlands, only topped by the coal-fired plant in the Eemshaven.
Sustainable
energy
The use of hydrogen is seen as another important part of efforts to
develop sustainable energy sources, alongside solar and wind power, broadcaster
NOS said. It will be used as a cleaner alternative for industry and may also be
considered as a substitute for the present Dutch dependence on gas to heat
homes.
According to NOS, Nouryon has experience with the use of hydrogen in
homes but on a much smaller scale than would be necessary. The government wants
the use of gas to be phased out by 2030.
The announcement comes ‘at an
auspicious moment’, NH Nieuws writes. Locals living in the vicinity of the Tata
complex mounted a vigorous protest against the steel producer on Wednesday
because, they claim, it is responsible for the thick layer of graphite covering
their homes.
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