Japanese utility Tohoku Electric Power plans to trial hydrogen co-firing at a combined-cycle gas turbine (CCGT) unit at its 109MW Niigata power plant, starting from mid-October.
Tohoku plans to begin with 1pc hydrogen co-firing with regasified LNG at the 54.5MW No.5-1 unit in northwest Japan's Niigata prefecture by using 200 Nm³ of hydrogen. It may consider raising this ratio in the future. Tohoku expects to use 20 cylinders of hydrogen in total for the demonstration. The hydrogen will be supplied by a local industrial gas supplier.
The demonstration will start after the company completes building a facility to supply hydrogen to existing fuel pipelines. The trial will last until the end of March 2025.
Any schedule for commercial co-firing after 2026 is still unclear, as Tohoku brought forward the demonstration start date from the original April 2024-March 2025 fiscal year and is also unsure what type of hydrogen it will use.
Tohoku is attempting to achieve decarbonisation by 2050 through various methods. It has joined forces with fellow utilities Shikoku Electric Power, Kyushu Electric Power and Chugoku Electric Power and thermal power producer Jera to develop a supply chain of hydrogen and fuel ammonia. Tohoku also plans to replace its ageing 600MW No.1 and No.2 gas-fired units at the Higashi-Niigata power plant with two 650MW CCGT units after 2030-31 to improve their efficiency and reduce carbon emissions.

