Oman to develop green hydrogen project

  • Spanish Market: Fertilizers, Hydrogen
  • 18/05/21

Oman will develop its first green hydrogen project using solar and wind power, state-owned energy company OQ said.

The 25,000MW project will be developed by a consortium of OQ, Hong Kong-based green hydrogen firm InterContinental Energy and Kuwait's clean energy investment firm Enertech. It did not give details on a timeline for the project, which has been in a planning phase for three years with wind and solar studies conducted in Oman's central Al-Wusta governorate.

The power generated will be used for water desalination and electrolysis at a coastal facility that will produce 1.8mn t/yr of green hydrogen and up to 10mn t/yr of green ammonia. The hydrogen could be used domestically, exported directly or converted into green ammonia for export, the consortium said.

"Existing energy infrastructure in Oman provides additional future options to develop synthetic fuels for the aviation sector, which will be critical for decarbonization," it said.

InterContinental Energy works with a consortium on a similar project in Australia, using 15,000MW of wind and solar power to produce hydrogen and ammonia for export to Asia-Pacific. It plans to make a final investment decision on that by 2025, and said that the falling cost of wind and solar means it possible for hydrogen and green ammonia export projects to be developed at scale.

These lower costs and the growing importance of reducing emissions has pushed the Mideast Gulf's traditionally oil-and-gas focused economies to consider options for hydrogen and ammonia production. Saudi Arabia shipped its first blue ammonia cargo last September as a trial for use in power plants with no CO2 emissions, and the UAE is building a hydrogen business case and aims to be a major global supplier.


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19/04/24

US amsul stripping margin rises again in April

US amsul stripping margin rises again in April

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Phosphates: Indian DAP stocks build in March


19/04/24
19/04/24

Phosphates: Indian DAP stocks build in March

London, 19 April (Argus) — DAP stocks rose by the equivalent of 2-3 import cargoes in March, or nearly 86,000t, as imports and local production outstripped offtake. Indian DAP production reached 218,900t in March, according to FAI data, down nearly 41pc on the same month in 2023. DAP imports reached 201,000t in March, down nearly 54pc on March 2023. Sales of DAP reached 334,200t, down nearly 12pc year on year. Stock draw/build, defined as production plus imports minus offtake, was plus 85,700t. This implies that stocks are still close to 2mn t of DAP, as estimated by the Indian government. Full fertilizer year DAP production (April 2023-March 2024) reached 4.29mn t, down around 1pc year on year. Imports were down 15.4pc at 5.57mn t, mainly due to the loss of supply from China owing to customs inspections, with sales at 10.8mn t, up nearly 4pc year on year. By Mike Nash Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Canada furthers investment in GHG reductions


18/04/24
18/04/24

Canada furthers investment in GHG reductions

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EPS to register six ammonia-powered newbuilds with SRS


17/04/24
17/04/24

EPS to register six ammonia-powered newbuilds with SRS

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Singapore's MPA, IEA unite on maritime decarbonisation


17/04/24
17/04/24

Singapore's MPA, IEA unite on maritime decarbonisation

Singapore, 17 April (Argus) — The Maritime and Port Authority of Singapore (MPA) and the IEA have signed an initial deal to push the transition to zero and near zero emission fuels, while working on technology as well as digitalisation to meet the maritime decarbonisation agenda. The agreement, signed by MPA chief executive Teo Eng Dih and IEA executive director Faith Birol, was announced at the Singapore Maritime Week 2024 (SMW) this week. "Greater international collaboration in maritime and energy industries is critical for international shipping to meet international decarbonisation goals," Teo said. "Shipping is one of the hardest sectors to decarbonise and we need to spur development and deployment of new technologies to slow and then reverse the rise in its emissions," said IEA chief economist Tim Gould. "This will require strong collaboration at a national and international level." Training programmes will be built to support the adoption of new fuels. There will also be partnerships made towards fuel-related projects and initiatives such as the International Maritime Organisation-Singapore NextGen project. The IEA plans to open its first regional co-operation centre in Singapore, which will be its first regional office outside of its headquarters in Paris, France. By Mahua Chakravarty Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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