UK's leading carbon storage project seeks buyer


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Powerfuel Hatfield CCS project enters administration as KPMG seeks a buyer, amid a funding gap for the 900 MW IGCC coal plant; despite an EU grant, carbon capture and storage plans stall in South Yorkshire.

 

At a Glance

A UK carbon capture initiative at a 900 MW IGCC coal plant in Hatfield, now in administration due to funding shortfall.

  • KPMG appointed administrator to sell mining and CCS assets
  • 900 MW IGCC coal plant at Hatfield, South Yorkshire
  • EC granted 180 million euros; funding gap remains 759 million
  • Project fell £635 million short, stalling development
  • Subsidiaries not in administration; sale process planned

 

Powerfuel plc, the owner of one of the UK's leading carbon capture and storage CCS projects, has gone into administration and is now seeking a buyer for the pilot plant.

 

The project is located at the proposed 900-megawatt MW coal-fired, integrated gas combined-cycle plant in Hatfield, South Yorkshire, as part of the UK's wider move toward deep-sea storage options for CCS development as well. Administrators KPMG have been appointed to sell Powerfuel's mining assets and the carbon capture project. The company's two subsidiaries, Powerfuel Mining Limited, which owns Hatfield Colliery and Powerfuel Power Limited, the power generation company, are not in administration.

This is another serious blow to the UK government's goal of becoming the world's leading location for CCS development. In October this year, E.ON AG, after proposing a carbon capture pipeline network in the UK, canned its CCS development plans for the 1,600-MW Kingsnorth coal-fired plant in the UK, blaming poor economic conditions.

Powerfuel, despite winning a significant grant for the CCS project from the European Commission this year, was unable to come up with the additional 759 million euros US $1 billion needed to build the plant.

"Developing low-carbon energy generation requires a large amount of capital up front, and the CCS development falls £635 million $1 billion short of the investment needed to progress the project beyond the preliminary stage," explained Richard Fleming, joint administrator and UK Head of Restructuring at KPMG. "The substantial funding gap has not been addressed in the past 12 months, and accordingly the project has stalled. The administration will enable a sales process to find a new owner, who can both take the CCS project forward and buttress the mine, which also requires around £30 million US $47.4 million of capital expenditure for works improvements."

Fleming added: "CCS is projected by the Department on Energy and Climate Change to be one of the cheapest forms of low-carbon energy generation. Powerfuel plc boasts the only license to trial the technology in the UK. While the economic environment is still challenging, we are hopeful that we can secure a sale of both companies and will be actively speaking to interested parties from today."

In October 2009, the Hatfield CCS project was the only UK carbon capture project to secure funding from the European Commission, with an award of 180 million euros US $237 million. The project beat out the carbon capture competition from plants including Longannet, in Fife, Scotland Tilbury in Essex and Kingsnorth in Kent, which are respectively owned and operated by ScottishPower Tilbury Green Power Limited, which is a subsidiary of Express Energy Holdings and E.ON.

 

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