UK Government gives go-ahead for CCS at Drax power station
The British Government gave approval on Tuesday for energy company Drax to develop carbon capture technology at its biomass power plant in North Yorkshire, UK.
The UK’s Secretary of State for Energy Security and Net Zero, Claire Coutinho, gave her approval to Drax’s planning application for the project, which could cost billpayers up to £43bn, according to climate think tank Ember.
Under current plans, Drax will fit two of its four biomass units with carbon capture technology, which would see them converted to bioenergy with carbon capture and storage (BECCS) stations.
Drax has estimated that the BECCS conversion could save the UK £15bn in whole economy costs between 2030 and 2050.
Drax CEO Will Gardiner said: “We look forward to working with our supply chain and other partners over the coming years on the project which, when fully operational, will deliver secure renewable power and approximately eight million tonnes of carbon dioxide removals per year.
“We welcome the ongoing development of policy support for BECCS and the anticipated launch of a consultation on a bridging mechanism for biomass generators to take them from the end of current renewable schemes through to BECCS operations,” he added.
Drax faced several scandals relating to huge government incentives and questionable environmental credentials last year, which it refutes.
In August, the UK’s Liberal Democrat leader, Ed Davey, accused the company of costing consumers more than £600m after it abandoned plans to run its Unit 1 biomass plant. A report published in the same month found that Drax has received £1.4bn in green-energy subsidies from billpayers money since 2016, payments that sit well above the market rate for electricity. The government is also set to extend a subsidy scheme that paid the company £600m last year alone.