Underground rock cavern hydrogen storage facility inaugurated in Luleå
SSAB, LKAB and Vattenfall are inaugurating HYBRIT’s pilot facility for fossil-free hydrogen storage at Svartöberget in Luleå, Sweden.
The rock cavern storage facility is reportedly the first of its kind in the world. The inauguration ceremony marks the start of the two-year test period, which will run until 2024.
The facility comes as part of the HYBRIT initiative, launched in 2016 by SSAB, LKAB and Vattenfall, which aims to create a fossil-free value chain from mine to finished steel.
The hydrogen storage facility aims to play a very important role in the overall value chain for fossil-free iron and steel production.
According to Vattenfall, producing fossil-free hydrogen gas when there is a lot of electricity, for example when it is very windy, and using stored hydrogen gas when the electricity system is under strain, will ensure a steady production of sponge iron, the raw material behind fossil-free steel.
“Sweden will create new jobs by leading the climate change transition, and HYBRIT is a good example of doing just that with green technology and innovation. When we build the energy system of the future, we need to both take advantage of opportunities to store energy and ensure that large energy users can be flexible in their consumption. This is exactly what HYBRIT does through its unique hydrogen storage”, stated minister for energy and digital development Khashayar Farmanbar.
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Facility
Construction of the hydrogen gas storage facility began in May 2021. Hydrogen storage will be tested in the facility using technology known as LRC (Lined Rock Cavern).
The gas is stored underground in a rock cavern, the walls of which are lined with a selected material as a sealing layer.
The fossil-free hydrogen gas is produced by water electrolysis using fossil-free electricity.
For this process, Vattenfall emphasises the important of building in rock of a type that maintains its good qualities. For example, the bedrock in Svartöberget consists mainly of amphibolite with elements of pegmatite and red granite.
The rock cavern in Svartöberget, where the gas is stored, is about 30 metres below ground level and 100 metres from the entrance.
Martin Pei, CTO at SSAB, stated: “SSAB has the opportunity to transform our operations and cut 10% of Sweden’s total carbon dioxide emissions as well as 7% of Finland’s, and this will take us one step closer to our goal. The hydrogen storage facility is an important piece of the puzzle in ensuring stable steel production and a milestone in the development of HYBRIT.”
“Hydrogen gas and its storage are central to our transition. In four years, HYBRIT technology will be used on a large scale in the first demonstration plant in Gällivare, and the plan is to then build more sponge iron factories. LKAB will therefore need to become one of Europe’s biggest hydrogen producers, and this pilot project will provide valuable knowledge for the continuing work on creating the world’s first fossil-free value chain for the iron and steel industry,” says Lars Ydreskog, Senior Vice President Strategic Projects at LKAB.
Klara Helstad, head of sustainable industry unit at the Swedish Energy Agency added: “The pilot plant is important in order to really test and understand how large-scale hydrogen storage works. Storage of hydrogen gas will be an important piece of the puzzle for a fossil-free value chain for the iron and steel industry, but also in a future robust electrical system.”
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Gas storage
The technology for storing gas in an LRC has been used in southern Sweden for about 20 years for storing natural gas.
This latest project aims to advance the technology a step forward by developing hydrogen storage. The facility will also be used more dynamically, being filled and emptied at pace with the hydrogen production.
The pilot plant has a size of 100 cubic metres. At a later stage, a full-scale hydrogen gas storage facility measuring 100,000 to 120,000 cubic metres may be required, in which case it will be able to store up to 100GWh of electricity converted to hydrogen gas, which is sufficient to supply a full-sized sponge iron factory for three to four days.
The announcement also signals the latest development in the HYBRIT initiative.
HYBRIT technology replaces the blast furnace process, which uses coal to remove oxygen from the iron ore, with a direct reduction process that uses fossil-free hydrogen gas. Instead of carbon dioxide, the by-product turns into water.
The pilot plant for the production of sponge iron in Luleå was commissioned on 31 August, 2020 and the next step is planned for 2026 with a demonstration plant for the production of fossil-free sponge iron on an industrial scale in Gällivare.
Using HYBRIT technology, SSAB can reportedly reduce Sweden’s carbon dioxide emissions by 10%. SSAB, LKAB and Vattenfall invest a total of SEK 259 million ($25.6 million) in the hydrogen storage itself, divided into three equal parts, and the Swedish Energy Agency contributes with SEK 72 million ($7.1 million).