Skip to main content

Hanson in UK hydrogen-fuelled asphalt trial

Hanson is part of the consortium Bay Hydrogen Hub – Hydrogen4Hanson which will use nuclear-generated heat and electricity to create hydrogen for asphalt and cement sites.
By David Arminas September 19, 2023 Read time: 2 mins
Hanson is part of the consortium Bay Hydrogen Hub – Hydrogen4Hanson which will use nuclear-generated heat and electricity from Heysham 2 Power Station (pictured) in the English county of Lancashire to create hydrogen for asphalt and cement sites (image courtesy EDF)

Materials supplier Hanson plans to scale up hydrogen-fuelled net-zero asphalt production at its Criggion asphalt plant in Wales under a UK government demonstration project.

Last year, the Department for Business Energy and Industrial Strategy awarded the consortium Bay Hydrogen Hub – Hydrogen4Hanson project, in Lancashire, England, around US$500 million for a feasibility study. The EDF-led consortium, in which Hanson is a member, will use technology which uses nuclear-generated heat and electricity to create hydrogen for asphalt and cement sites.

The consortium, which also includes National Nuclear Laboratory (NNL) and Vulcan Burners, will match the government’s funding. The hub’s pilot project aims to use nuclear-power-derived hydrogen from Heysham 2 Power Station in the English county of Lancashire to replace the mix of fossil fuels currently used in asphalt production at Hanson’s Criggion plant in Wales. The trial could be running by next year.

The hydrogen will be created by diverting small quantities of electricity and steam from the nuclear power generation process at Heysham 2, via the construction of a solid oxide electrolysis cell (SOEC) electrolyser. Modern high-capacity tankers will transport the hydrogen for use as a fuel at Criggion.

“Nuclear power derived hydrogen has the potential to be a complete game-changer for decarbonising asphalt and cement production,” said Simon Willis, chief executive of Hanson UK. “Our involvement in the Bay Hydrogen Hub project underscores our commitment to lead the way by investing in cutting edge technologies to prove they can deliver in real-world situations and help us meet our net-zero goals.

“Hanson has already successfully shown that hydrogen can be used as part of a net-zero fuel mix at our cement works in Ribblesdale, Lancashire. But its use as a fuel at an asphalt site has not yet been physically demonstrated anywhere in the world,” said Willis.

Initially work will focus on developing a final design for the hydrogen production, distribution and end-use technology. Switching fuel to net-zero hydrogen asphalt production at Criggion will follow.

Hanson UK, part of Heidelberg Materials and a supplier of heavy building materials to the construction industry, is split into four business lines – aggregates (crushed rock, sand and gravel), concrete, asphalt and contracting and cement.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Intelligent paving and compaction holds the key
    October 16, 2024
    Intelligent paving and compaction holds the key to more efficient road construction according to BOMAG – Mike Woof writes
  • Volvo excavators are DNA of India’s SVA
    March 28, 2014
    Indian extraction company SVA Blue Metals is producing millions of tonnes of aggregates/year, using a fleet of Volvo excavators SVA Blue Metals was founded three decades ago by the father of present owner R Ramakrishnan, who handed the business over to his son 15 years ago. The company runs a facility in Karanampettai village close to the bustling industrial city of Coimbatore, around 471km from Chennai, the capital of Tamil Nadu state, and has a license to extract from a portion of the site – with a view
  • Concrete mixing technology offers advanced recipes
    February 13, 2012
    Modern concrete production plants are using technology to offer more sophisticated mix recipes as Patrick Smith reports. The growing trend towards ever more sophisticated concrete recipes calls for fully developed mixing technology. Companies are responding to the challenges with equipment that offers new levels of sophistication including computer controls and units that can deliver a huge variety of mix recipes.
  • Asphalt paving in island paradise
    May 9, 2012
    Praslin, the second-largest of the Seychelles Islands with roughly 6,500 inhabitants, is a tropical paradise of white sandy beaches, dense jungle and crystal clear seas. Tourism is the island's main source of income, and luxury tourism at that. A road had to be diverted for a new five-star hotel and property development project which will create jobs for around 400 people. The road would have obstructed the residents' access to the sea. Sey-Afrique Exporters from Pinetown, South Africa, won the contra