Environment Eco

June 1st, 2022

World’s first 100% hydrogen-fired bricks to be made and tested in Sussex

A Greater Brighton project has been given £292,000 of government funding to create the world’s first 100% hydrogen-fired clay bricks.

Members of Hydrogen Sussex are working with West Sussex-based Michelmersh, the UK’s fourth-largest brick makers, on the innovative project.

Hydrogen Sussex was launched by Greater Brighton Economic Board last year to support the development of a low carbon hydrogen economy across the county. Its members include local authorities, businesses, transport providers, utilities companies, colleges, the universities of Brighton and Sussex and many other organisations.

Funding from the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy’s industrial fuel switching competition through its Net Zero Innovation Portfolio will be used to conduct a trial to test the viability of using hydrogen in the brick-making process instead of natural gas at
Michelmersh’s site in Freshfield Lane, Danehill, near Haywards Heath.

The Hybrick study will use green electrolytic hydrogen - hydrogen that has been produced using renewable energy - in the brick-firing process.

The bricks produced will then be tested under different heat and weather conditions in a laboratory to compare they have the strength and durability of bricks made traditionally using natural gas.

In total, the UK brick manufacturing industry produces 1.9 billion bricks a year (of which Michelmersh produces 125 million bricks) and emits over 1 million tonnes of CO2 annually. If the trial is successful, replacing natural gas with hydrogen in the brick-firing process could cut emissions from the industry by 80%.

Hydrogen Sussex members Limpsfield Combustion, the University of Brighton, Net Zero Associates and Greater SouthEast Net Zero Hub are working on the project with Michelmersh. A team from the University of Brighton will also carry out air quality testing to monitor the impact of using hydrogen in the brick production process.

The project aims to inspire radical change across the sector by presenting opportunities and evidence-based research to help manufacturers to decarbonise their production processes.

Michelmersh Innovation Director Sarah Le Gresley said: “This is an exciting and significant project that could make a huge difference to the environment not just in the UK but around the world.

“By pushing the boundaries to a whole new level, we can help the UK to become a world leader in sustainable manufacturing.”

Sarah is working together with Michael Brophy, Michelmersh Group Production Director, who is enthusiastic to explore the engineering, production capabilities and requirements that will take sustainable UK manufacturing to the next level.

Hydrogen Sussex is working with its members on projects to develop the technology to support the use of low carbon hydrogen across a variety of sectors, including heavy transport and the maritime sector to power HGVs, boats and larger vessels instead of fossil fuels, and to identify potential locations in the region where hydrogen could be produced using renewable energy.

Project manager Abigail Dombey, the Chair of Hydrogen Sussex and Director of Net Zero Associates, said: “It’s incredibly exciting to be involved with the production of the world’s first 100% hydrogen-fired clay bricks.

“Construction is a huge contributor to carbon emissions so this environmentally-friendly innovation will play a vital role as a building block in our net-zero future.”

John Taylor, from the Greater South East Net Zero Hub and the Vice Chair of Hydrogen Sussex, said: “Brick-making has a historic association with Sussex and bricks are one of the most widely used commodities in the world.

“As embodied carbon emissions go up the building agenda, this project comes at an important time to prove even the most familiar industries can deeply decarbonise. We’re pleased to have helped bring together regional partners to deliver this ground-breaking project.”

The funding is part of the government’s £1 billion Net Zero Innovation Portfolio (NZIP), which aims to provide funding for low-carbon technologies to reduce the costs of decarbonisation in the UK.

Greater Brighton aims to lead the way in switching to cleaner, renewable power and laying the foundations for the development of a thriving low-carbon economy. Its energy plan aims to tackle climate change and help the city region become carbon neutral by 2030.

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May 30th, 2022

NEW WORTHING ENVIRONMENT CHIEF TELLS SOUTHERN WATER: CLEAN UP YOUR ACT

The new environment leader for Worthing Borough Council today challenged Southern Water to urgently invest in measures to clean up the borough’s coastal waters.

Cllr Vicki Wells, Cabinet Member for the Environment, said she wanted tighter government limits on the amounts of untreated sewage water companies can discharge into the sea. She said it was ‘an appalling and environmentally disastrous practice’.

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May 10th, 2022

The coat of hopes is coming to Worthing!

Free public event on Monday 16th May 6.30pm to 8pm at Coast Café BN11 2FG.
All welcome to come and hear the story of the beautiful coat.

Barbara Keal, the artist behind the coat of hopes says:
'The ‘coat of hopes’ is a patchwork coat made by hundreds of people and worn by hundreds of people on a 900km walk/pilgrimage from Newhaven to COP26 the UN Climate Summit in Glasgow. Each patch is a piece of blanket into which has been sewn the griefs, remembrances, prayers and hopes of an individual or group for their local landscape in the face of climate breakdown. The coat is accompanied by a song which is traditionally sung whenever a new person puts it on. When the coat is put on it invites the wearer to feel its weight and warmth and to step briefly into being the protagonist in the climate breakdown story, it may also invite the wearer to speak their own griefs, remembrances, prayers or hopes for their own local area.'

Email: emmacameron333@gmail.com
https://www.coatofhopes.uk
https://fb.me/e/2k6ns6r6H

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April 9th, 2022

Council goes to High Court to fight development

Worthing Borough Council has gone to the High Court in its fight to prevent hundreds of homes being built at Chatsmore Farm.
The Council has submitted its legal challenge to the Planning Inspectorate’s decision that the green gap between Goring and Ferring can be built on.
This first step in the process involves the Council asking the High Court for permission to take its case to the court for a judicial review. That review would be heard by a High Court judge and could result in the Planning Inspectorate being told to scrap its original decision and consider the case again.

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