Mitsubishi Heavy Industry (MHI), a Japanese engineering firm, and Alexandria National Refining and Petrochemicals (ANRPC) from Egypt plan to introduce hydrogen into the oil refining process at ANRPC’s refineries to cut CO2 emissions.
MHI has signed an agreement with ANRPC on the hydrogen introduction. MHI will convert the existing boiler at ANRPC’s refinery that currently burns fuel oil and natural gas into one that utilises natural gas and hydrogen, with a steam capacity of 100 t/hour.
By-product hydrogen produced at a catalyst reformer unit during the oil refining process will be utilised at the boiler, which is currently burned at a flare stack. MHI and ANPRC are targeting 100% hydrogen burning at the boiler by the end of 2023.
The companies expect the project to reduce ANPRC’s carbon emissions by 22,000 t/yr, contributing to Egypt’s sustainable energy strategy, MHI said. ANRPC’s gasoline supply makes up 30pc of Egypt’s total domestic consumption.
Tags: ANRPC, Hydrogen, MHI, Oil Refining
Recent Posts
NYK Concludes Contract for a Dual-fuel Methanol VLCC for Idemitsu Tanker
Toshiba Launches New SCiB™ Module for EV Buses, Electric Ships, and Stationary Applications
Kolkata set to get India’s largest EV charging hub
SANY launches India’s first locally made hybrid mining dump truck
IMO issues interim guidelines for ammonia-fuelled ships’ safety
India’s second green hydrogen auction awards $258m to 9 companies
Indian OMCs launch new biodiesel tender for FY 2025-26
India’s first hydrogen train set for launch by March 31