logo
Carbon capture system installed at Parc Adfer, Deeside

Carbon capture system installed at Parc Adfer, Deeside

Leader Live4 days ago
enfinium's Parc Adfe plant, on Deeside Industrial Estate, opened in 2019 and processes around 200,000 tonnes of waste a year – turning it into energy, powering 170,000 homes.
Society produces significant amounts of residual unrecyclable waste – material that remains after efforts to reduce, reuse and recycle. Before facilities like Parc Adfer, it used to end up in landfill sites.
It works by burning waste at high temperatures, producing high pressure steam in a boiler. The steam drives the blades of a turbine generator to generate electricity.
Residual ash, produced from the waste-to-energy process, is then used in the construction of roads, and metals are removed during the process and recycled.
The next challenge at Parc Adfer is to decarbonise the residual waste stream – and the solution has been to install a CCS (Carbon Capture and Storage) facility as a pilot project.
Carbon capture will not only decarbonise the waste sector, it will transform plants like Parc Adfer into significant Carbon Removals sources.
Over 50 per cent of the residual waste processed at Parc Adfer is biogenic – meaning that the carbon this waste releases was recently present in the atmosphere (from food, plants ect). If captured and permanently stored, this will result in a net removal from the atmosphere.
The carbon capture facility at Parc Adfer. (Image: Newsquest) enfinium hopes the CCS will remove 120,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide each year, which is roughly equivalent to removing 89,000 cars from the road.
The company is waiting on the outcome of its bid to UK Department for Energy Security and Net Zero to make Parc Adfer part of the Hynet Cluster project – which will see carbon captured from the region's industry and transported via an underground pipeline to Liverpool Bay where it will be held in depleted oil and gas fields in the Irish Sea.
Mike Maudsley, CEO, of enfinium, said: 'By piloting carbon capture technology at our Parc Adfer facility, we're not only progressing our plans to deploy the technology at scale here in North Wales, but we're demonstrating the critical role our sector can play in Wales's transition to a circular, decarbonised economy.
'Waste to energy facilities fitted with carbon capture have a superpower – an ability not only to decarbonise society's unrecyclable waste, but to use this to actively remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.
"With CCS installed, Parc Adfer will become the largest carbon removals project in Wales, creating and supporting skilled jobs, generating lasting growth in the region, and supporting Wales's world-leading efforts to create a sustainable, circular economy.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

German cabinet approves bill to accelerate carbon storage infrastructure
German cabinet approves bill to accelerate carbon storage infrastructure

Reuters

time14 hours ago

  • Reuters

German cabinet approves bill to accelerate carbon storage infrastructure

BERLIN, Aug 6 (Reuters) - Germany's cabinet approved on Wednesday reforms to accelerate the development of infrastructure for carbon dioxide capture and storage as Berlin aims to become carbon neutral by 2045 while keeping its hard-to-decarbonise industries. Carbon capture and storage, or CCS, removes from the atmosphere carbon dioxide produced by industrial processes or captures it at the point of emission and stores it underground. Industries that are hard to decarbonise such as cement and lime production and gas power plants will be allowed to store CO2 offshore, under the seabed or inland if individual federal states allow it on their territory. The bill will classify the construction and operation of CO2 storage facilities and pipelines as being in the "overriding public interest", and simplify planning and approval procedures. Germany's previous government had introduced steps to push CCS technology but failed to get them passed before it collapsed in November. The draft approved on Wednesday is more ambitious. Under the bill, existing natural gas pipelines could be adapted or converted to carry carbon dioxide instead of natural gas to reduce the need to build entirely new pipelines. Authorities could legally take over private land, with compensation, for building CO2 pipelines. Geologically, Germany has around 1.5 billion to 8.3 billion tons of CO2 storage capacity under its part of the North Sea and could deposit up to 20 million tons annually.

Glasgow plaque 'reveals source' of Barr's Irn Bru's flavour
Glasgow plaque 'reveals source' of Barr's Irn Bru's flavour

Glasgow Times

timea day ago

  • Glasgow Times

Glasgow plaque 'reveals source' of Barr's Irn Bru's flavour

It claims that founder Robert Barr accidentally spilled his tea on the rocky spot which turned it into a "bright orange liquid" which became the iconic Irn Bru flavouring. The tongue in cheek marker is attached to the fence near Kelvinbridge subway station to mark the site of "Robert Barr's Guid Ore Mine." Passersby can stop and take in the "history" of the "mine" (rail tunnel). The tall-tale of Robert Barr's 'Guid Ore Mine' (Image: Newsquest) READ MORE: IRN-BRU to bring back famous 'Made in Scotland from Girders' tagline in £8m campaign READ MORE: 'It's just great': Japan ambassador tries Irn-Bru on visit to whisky distillery The plaque reads: "In 1863, Robert Barr, the son of a Falkirk cork-maker, was brewing tea on this spot when he accidently knocked over his kettle. "To his surprise, the hot water dissolved some of the rocky outcrop on which he sat, turning it into a bright orange, effervescent liquid. "Out of curiosity, but with much trepidation, Barr tasted the resulting concoction and was surprised to find it had a unique, slightly metallic, and not entirely unpleasant flavour. "Realising the opportunity, Barr borrowed enough money to purchase the land around the outcrop. "He then set to work mining what he called his' guid ore' which he turned into a health tonic he named Iron Brew and advertised as being made in Scotland from 'guid ore': It was an instant hit, and within a matter of months it had made him a millionaire many times over. "By 1890, Barr had extracted all of the guid ore he could and despite an exhaustive search, he couldn't locate another source. "By then he'd stock-piled enough to ensure the continuous production of his Iron Brew (which was rebranded as Irn-Bru in the 1940s) until 2037, but after that date, the company he founded will no longer be able to produce any more. "In 1892, Barr sold the mine to the Caledonian Railway Company, who used it as the basis of a new railway line connecting the west of Glasgow to the city centre via this tunnel. "However, the steam from the engines mixed with the last traces of guid ore' in the rock, creating a distinctive dour which made it unpopular with the more refined residents of Glasgow's fashionable west end and it closed soon after." This is of course, a bit of a fabrication on the truth behind Scotland's favourite drink that's "made from girders." The plaque was erected by the Glasgow Information and Kultural Identity Taskforce (GlaIKIT). It's one of several across the city which GlaIKIT say are their "guide to the interesting (and some would say unbelievable) events which we feel have helped shape the city we call home." For anyone visiting Glasgow for the @UciWorldCycling and who wants to learn a little more about the host city, we have provided a number of informative plaques. They're not remotely not true, but they are informative! #glasgow #glaikit #glasgowhistory #glasgowhumour — Glasgow Information & Kultural Identity Taskforce (@Glaikit_Scot) August 11, 2023 READ MORE: Schoolboy's death 'could possibly have been avoided' says sheriff's FAI report The plaques previously caught people's attention as one at the Duke of Wellington Statue claimed to provide the inside story ofthe 'Ancient Tradition Behind The Cones On Glasgow's Statues'. Others tell tall-tales of "the short-lived prohibition on potatoes" in the city and one famous gig in King Tut's in the city centre, claiming that "the Gallagher brothers only got their big break as the result of a typographic error." Glasgow plaque 'reveals source' of Barr's Irn Bru's flavour (Image: Newsquest) Other humorous plaques detail fierce battles like "The Legendary Bun Fight At The Byres Road Corral." While all the stories are a bit far-fetched, they offer a city wanderer the opportunity to stop and take in the sights around them that they may have overlooked. As for Irn Bru, the secret recipe to its iconic taste still remains a mystery...

German cartel office approves OGE's CO2 pipeline projects with ONTRAS and Fluxys
German cartel office approves OGE's CO2 pipeline projects with ONTRAS and Fluxys

Reuters

time2 days ago

  • Reuters

German cartel office approves OGE's CO2 pipeline projects with ONTRAS and Fluxys

BERLIN, Aug 5 (Reuters) - Germany's cartel office said Tuesday that it has no fundamental competition concerns regarding the planned construction of two CO2 pipelines by Open Grid Europe GmbH (OGE) in collaboration with ONTRAS Gastransport GmbH and Belgian company Fluxys. "According to the current status, even without cooperation, it would not be expected that the participating companies would undertake competing CO2 pipeline projects in the coming years," said Andreas Mundt, president of the cartel office. "Therefore, from a competition perspective, there are no fundamental concerns against the two cooperation projects." The projects, expected to involve investments in the single-digit billion-euro range, aim to enhance Germany's carbon capture and storage (CCS) capabilities.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store