Worley supporting Shell in site conversion20 September 2024

Worley Shell site converion (Image credit: Shell)

Worley, a professional services company, is supporting Shell in a site conversion in Germany that will also involve the production of renewable hydrogen.

The transformation programme is taking place at Shell’s energy and chemicals park Rheinland.

The project will involve the conversion of a hydrocracker into a production unit for base oils at the Wesseling site in the facility near Cologne. The site is expected to stop processing crude oils in 2025. The new base oil plant will have a production capacity of around 300,000 tonnes per year.

By repurposing the hydrocracker and introducing a degree of electrification, the project is expected to reduce Shell’s scope 1 and 2 carbon emissions by around 620,000 tonnes a year.

Worley was previously the primary engineering partner working on the assess, select and define phases of the project. Now, as the initiative moves into the design and procurement stages, Worley’s efforts are focused on providing services needed to meet the necessary standards for functionality, safety and regulatory compliance. Work will continue to be based in Worley’s office in Cologne, supported by the business’s global integrated delivery team in Mumbai.

Worley is also working with Shell to enable renewable hydrogen production at the facility, with work carried out to provide early front-end engineering and design (pre-FEED), FEED, design and integration services for the REFHYNE II project.

This will see the installation of a 100 MW electrolyser, expected to produce up to 44,000 kilogram of renewable hydrogen every day, which Shell will use to decarbonise its operations. The electrolyser will be based on the 10-megawatt electrolyser, REFHYNE I, which started up in 2021 and uses the same technology.

The REFHYNE II project achieved a final investment decision in July 2024. In the longer term, renewable hydrogen from the project could be supplied to help reduce industrial emissions in the region as customer demand evolves.

André van Drunen, managing director Germany at Worley, said: "These projects build on our long-term collaboration with Shell at its Energy and Chemicals Park Rheinland. Our deep domain knowledge of Shell’s asset, local delivery capabilities and sector expertise enables us to support Shell's transformation efforts and investments."

Marijn Bezuijen, project director Rheinland, said: “The Energy and Chemicals Park Rheinland is on a transformation journey to help Shell become a net-zero emissions company by 2050. In the coming years, we will be working on key projects to achieve this.”

The base oil production plant and renewable hydrogen facility are expected to start operations in the second half of the decade.

Operations Engineer

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