Home GCC Qatar Qatar to tap global hydrogen market with $1bn plant Qatar aims to develop its carbon capture and storage facilities so that it can sequester as much as 11 million tons of carbon dioxide a year by 2035 by Bloomberg September 1, 2022 Qatar plans to build a $1bn plant to make blue ammonia, a fuel that can be converted into hydrogen by countries looking to reduce their carbon emissions. While nascent, the worldwide market for ammonia is expected to grow as it can be shipped and converted into hydrogen, which is considered a clean fuel because it doesn’t produce carbon dioxide. Ammonia can also be burned to produce electricity or used as a fertilizer. QatarEnergy Renewable Solutions & QAFCO launch the world’s largest blue ammonia facility#QatarEnergy #YourEnergyTransitionPartner #Qatar pic.twitter.com/MWimfS12xN — QatarEnergy (@qatarenergy) August 31, 2022 QatarEnergy signed agreements with Industries Qatar and its subsidiary, Qatar Fertiliser Co., to develop a so-called blue ammonia plant that will be able to produce as much as 1.2 million tons a year, energy minister and CEO of QatarEnergy said at a ceremony in Doha on Wednesday. Germany’s ThyssenKrupp and Consolidated Contractors Co. in Greece have been awarded a contract for the plant dubbed ‘Ammonia-7,’ QatarEnergy said in a statement. To make ammonia, hydrogen is combined with nitrogen. When hydrogen is extracted from natural gas and the carbon dioxide byproduct is captured, the resulting ammonia is considered “blue.” About 1.5 million tons of carbon dioxide will be captured and sequestered from the ammonia-making process per year once the blue ammonia plant starts operating in the first quarter of 2026, according to the statement. Qatar aims to develop its carbon capture and storage facilities so that it can sequester as much as 11 million tons of carbon dioxide a year by 2035. Tags ammonia carbon emissions electricity Fertilizer fuel Hydrogen Qatar 0 Comments You might also like Qatar Airways resumes flights to Bahrain UK Business and Trade Secretary Kemi Badenoch on Gulf states tour Qatar allots $275m to a new market-making programme Qatar stocks could attract up to $3.5bn on free float plan