Issue 5, 2024

Green ethylene production in the UK by 2035: a techno-economic assessment

Abstract

Olefins production in the UK is the most emission-intensive sector of the chemical industry. Bringing thermocatalytic and electrocatalytic processes together, this paper compares nine process routes for green ethylene production from air-captured CO2 and off-shore wind electricity in order to displace fossil-based ethylene, with a particular focus on technology readiness for near-future deployment. The methanol-mediated thermocatalytic route has the lowest projected levelised cost at £2900 per ton of ethylene by 2035, closely followed by direct and tandem CO2 electroreduction routes in the range £2900–3200. The price of green ethylene at three times or more its current market price is confirmed through a sensitivity analysis varying the levelised cost of electricity, stack cost, and market price of propylene or oxygen simultaneously. While these green ethylene production processes would be carbon negative from a cradle-to-gate viewpoint, displacing a conventional ethane cracker with annual production capacity of 800 kt could consume as much as 46–66 TW h of renewable electricity, which is a major barrier to deployment.

Graphical abstract: Green ethylene production in the UK by 2035: a techno-economic assessment

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
12 Sep 2023
Accepted
17 Jan 2024
First published
18 Jan 2024
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Energy Environ. Sci., 2024,17, 1931-1949

Green ethylene production in the UK by 2035: a techno-economic assessment

A. H. Nyhus, M. Yliruka, N. Shah and B. Chachuat, Energy Environ. Sci., 2024, 17, 1931 DOI: 10.1039/D3EE03064D

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