Topsoe, a global leader in carbon emission reduction technologies, has been chosen as a technology provider and engineering partner for the Triskelion project, located in Galicia, Spain. The project, owned by the Spanish shipping and chemicals company Forestal del Atlántico, was a recipient of a €49-MM grant from the EU Innovation Fund in 2023.
Due to its inherent versatility, eMethanol offers multiple pathways for decarbonization across industries, particularly as a fuel in industrial transport such as international shipping, and the International Maritime Organization (IMO) targets for include eMethanol to make up 8% of global shipping fuel demand by 2030. Spain has proved ambitious in renewable fuels applications, as the country has set a target of 74% of H2 used by industry in 2030 has to be green. This compares the 42% agreed by EU member states in the Renewable Energy Directive.
Kim Hedegaard, CEO Power-to-X at Topsoe, said, “We are excited to be selected as the technology provider for this promising project. eMethanol will act as a key driver in decarbonizing the energy-intensive sectors and may be one of the leading eFuels used in reducing carbon emissions in industries such as international shipping. Topsoe and Forestal del Atlántico have a shared ambition to make the Triskelion project a European leader in this space, and we look forward to working together to turning these ambitions into reality.”
Andrés Fuentes, CEO at Forestal del Atlántico, said, “For Forestal del Atlántico it is very important to have leading technology suppliers for the development of a project as innovative as Triskelion and Topsoe is a guarantee of the highest level to successfully develop and decarbonize our company, after more than 30 years using methanol of fossil origin for our production processes as well as distributing it in the market. This agreement makes that goal much closer.”
Topsoe will provide its eMethanol reactor and catalyst technologies, as well as engineering support to Triskelion – a core element of the project’s functionality and a key enabler for its eMethanol production targets.
Once operational, the plant will produce 40,000 tons of eMethanol, while capturing and using about 56,000 tons of CO2 annually. The eMethanol produced is initially intended for bunkering, transportation, and applications in the chemicals industries.
Facts about the Triskelion eMethanol plant