Stacey Collins of Pinsent Masons said that the commitments in the deal "keep up the momentum around the decarbonisation of industrial clusters" following recent publications by the government on industrial decarbonisation and the sequencing of CCUS project clusters. The government is expected to publish a clean hydrogen strategy in the coming months, and a wider net zero strategy document later in the year.
"It's great to see so much guidance and ambition from the government in the net zero space, but there's a lot of detail needed to give companies confidence in the best way to embrace decarbonisation," he said.
"It's not surprising that CCUS and low-carbon hydrogen are key aspects of the deal, as the government is betting heavily on those technologies in terms of its net zero commitments. The oil and gas sector is already developing significant projects based on such technologies, and the deal recognises that the sector has the skillset to benefit from the substantial growth of CCUS and hydrogen that the government is expecting," he said.
"However, the key barrier to such projects is likely to be financial, rather than technical. Deploying CCUS and low carbon hydrogen at scale in the UK will require a huge amount of investment from both the government and private sector investors. As a result, much will depend on the detail of the CCUS and hydrogen business support models that are to be developed and finalised throughout this year and into the next. The hope is that these models will be sufficient to give investors the confidence to invest in the necessary development of these relatively new markets," he said.
The government intends to appoint an 'industry supply chain champion' to support the coordination of job and supply chain opportunities in sectors such as CCUS and offshore wind. The sector has committed in the deal to achieving 50% 'local content' for all related new energy transition projects by 2030, as well as for oil and gas decommissioning projects. The commitments in the plan, when combined with those in the government's 10-point 'green industrial revolution' plan, will support 40,000 jobs in decommissioning, CCUS and hydrogen.
Industry expert Shirley Allen of Pinsent Masons said: "In the last 12 months, the sector has lost a significant number of quality personnel, so the commitment to support 40,000 jobs signals a real effort in attracting recent leavers back into the industry and encouraging new graduates".
"The skills the industry already has will be transferred into the development of cutting edge technologies and ambitious low carbon projects, building strong skill sets that can be exported globally in years to come," she said.