Coastal Bend LNG, developer of a multi-train natural gas liquefaction and export facility along the Texas Gulf Coast, has commenced a FEED study with Solvanic for electrochemically mediated amine regeneration (EMAR) carbon capture at its Coastal Bend LNG facility.
Solvanic has signed an option agreement for use of the EMAR technology, originally developed by Professor T. Alan Hatton’s research group at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Department of Chemical Engineering. The technology uses an electrochemical process to release carbon dioxide captured by amines with electricity, rather than high temperature steam traditionally used in thermal amine systems. This approach reduces the energy requirements and capital costs for carbon capture and enables much greater flexibility across operating conditions and process scales. The EMAR technology has been in development at MIT for over a decade, with recent breakthroughs by Dr Michael Massen-Hane and Dr Michael Nitzsche, paving the way for emissions reductions that were previously infeasible. Drs Massen-Hane and Nitzsche have since become co-founders of Solvanic to scale the technology into industry and maximise their climate impacts.
“To deliver on our ambitious low carbon intensity LNG goals, we need to capture carbon dioxide emissions from both our natural gas pretreatment and co-generation facilities,” said Nick Flores, CEO, Coastal Bend LNG. “For post-combustion capture on our on-site cogeneration facilities, we need a step change in carbon capture efficiency. We’re highly encouraged by Solvanic’s preliminary technoeconomics and are keen to accelerate their technology readiness with this FEED study.”
“We have demonstrated our EMAR solution to Technology Readiness Level 4 with low energetics, high stability, and modular scalability across emission sources,” added Dr Michael Nitzsche, Co-Founder and Chief Technology Officer, Solvanic. “This FEED study accelerates our techno-economic analyses for gas processing and post-combustion carbon capture with the full engineering support of Coastal Bend LNG and their contractors.”
“We are leveraging over a decade of electrochemical carbon capture research and development at MIT via this option agreement. We appreciate Coastal Bend LNG’s confidence in the technology to meet their industrial decarbonisation objectives,” concluded Dr Michael Massen-Hane, Co-Founder and CEO, Solvanic.