- PLANT WILL COVER 550,000 M2
- THE DIAMETER OF THE ETHANE TANK AT THE SITE IS ALMOST AS LONG AS A FOOTBALL FIELD
- 300,000 M3 OF SOIL HAS BEEN EXCAVATED
- THE WATER TREATMENT PLANT PURIFIES 75M3 OF WATER PER HOUR
BUYERS OF ETHYLENE FROM PROJECT ONE WILL SAVE TWO MILLION TONNES OF CO2 EMISSIONS EVERY YEAR - 45,000 TONNES OF STEEL WILL BE CONSUMED, EQUIVALENT TO 6X THE EIFFEL TOWER
- THE ACTUAL ETHANE CRACKER HAS A FOOTPRINT OF SOME 75,000M²
- THE PROJECT WILL REQUIRE THOUSANDS OF KILOMETRES OF POWER LINES
Greenest cracker in Europe
It will be the greenest cracker in Europe, and possibly even the world. The plant will emit less than half of the CO2 emissions of the cleanest crackers in Europe and could help to revitalize the whole of the European chemical industry. The plant will be built using the very best of today’s technology– with one eye on the future – so it can one day capture its CO2 and use 100% hydrogen as a fuel.
$4 billion project
The final bill for Project ONE is likely to be about $4 billion. It is the largest investment in the European chemical industry for a generation. For decades no one has invested such a significant amount in the European chemical industry, opting for the US, China and other parts of Asia instead. It is hoped INEOS’ investment will help to reverse that trend and the decline, and help to make the sector more competitive.
1.5Mt ethylene
It will produce almost one and a half million tonnes of ethylene – one of the most widely used chemicals in the world and essential for a wide range of products, including clothing, medicines, lightweight parts for cars, lubricants for wind turbines, gas pipelines and food packaging.
Ethane gas
The ethane gas we use as feedstock is shipped from the United States where it is abundantly available as a byproduct from shale gas extraction.
The 200ft furnaces – the same height as Antwerp’s Museum aan de Stroom and weighing about 6,000 tonnes – had been reinforced with steel and welded to the ship to stop them from toppling into the sea during the journey from Thailand to Belgium.
The overseas transit of the furnaces was actually considered to be one of the most critical moments during the lifetime of the furnaces.
After docking, the ship spent a further nine days in the port to allow Flemish contractor Sarens to off-load the €150 million module with furnaces and pipe racks.
‘INEOS’ multi-billion investment is pioneering and will strengthen Antwerp’s role as a strategic international hub. The arrival of this furnace is an important step towards building a forward-thinking, sustainable industry.’