Plans to expand the Port of Tacoma’s existing LNG terminal were canceled in early 2024.
Plans to expand the Port of Tacoma’s existing LNG terminal were canceled in early 2024.
Puget Sound Energy operates an LNG facility located at the Port of Tacoma. The facility is owned by the Port of Tacoma and leased to Puget. The facility was commissioned in 2022. The facility is too small to produce enough LNG for export. An expansion plan was canceled in early 2024.
Phillips 66 and Renewable Energy Group notified the Department of Ecology and Whatcom County in January 2020 that they no longer planned to build a large-scale renewable fuels plant in Ferndale, Washington. The facility would have been built within the Phillips 66 Ferndale Refinery and would have processed fats, oils, and grease into as much… Continue reading Green Apple | Ferndale Renewable Fuels Refinery
In May 2024, AltaGas detailed its plans for a green hydrogen production and storage facility at the site of a former aluminum smelter in Washington state. The project could cost $850 million to $1 billion. AltaGas was selected to receive funds as part of the $1bn DOE grant for a hub in the Pacific Northwest.… Continue reading AltaGas | Washington Green Hydrogen Production and Storage Facility
OCOchem’s first carbon conversion commercial-scale facility, which will be located in Richland, Washington, and cost “multiple tens of millions of dollars.” OCOchem electrochemically converts emitted CO2 and water to formic acid, which can then be used to make a suite of products like hydrogen, carbon monoxide, and formate (methanoate) derivatives. CO2 is captured from steam… Continue reading OCOchem | Carbon Conversion Facility
An IGCC power plant. The CO2 would have been sequestered in basalt formations 1.3 miles underground. The project, which was supposed to become operational in 2013, was canceled in 2008 because of trouble obtaining drilling equipment and general delays.
The PGF project is designed to produce 0.7 million tons of zero-carbon nitrate fertilizer annually, primarily serving the Pacific Northwest region. The plant will utilize air, water, carbon-free electricity, and limestone or dolomite as the only raw materials. Renewable electricity is used to produce green hydrogen through electrolysis of water. This hydrogen will then be… Continue reading Atlas Agro | Pacific Green Fertilizer
A cellulosic renewable bio-jet fuel production facility in the Pacific Northwest. Located in the Columbia River Corridor, the facility will produce sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) using woody biomass as the primary feedstock source.
A study on how to permanently and safely store CO2 below the ocean floor. The goal is to capture CO2 from the atmosphere and inject it into young (less than 15 million years old) porous basalt rock, such as that found in the Cascadia Basin off the west coast of Canada, where it would interact… Continue reading Cascadia Basin Carbon Sequestration
Twelve will produce sustainable aviation fuel made from CO2 and renewable energy, with a commercial-scale production facility in Moses Lake, WA. The company’s technology utilizes a CO2 electrochemical reactor called OPUS that turns carbon dioxide into hydrocarbons, which are feedstocks for a variety of products. The commercial plant will run on hydropower and use CO2… Continue reading Twelve | AirPlant™ One Moses Lake