Plans for a $600 million hydrogen plant at Whyalla shelved as government announces steelworks support package
The South Australian Government’s plan to build a major hydrogen electrolyser and power plant near Whyalla has effectively been scrapped, with the Premier Peter Malinauskas blaming the lack of progress on a plan for green steel at the local steelworks for the decision.
The hydrogen plant was one of Labor’s major election promises — an almost $600 million project that it said would lead to more jobs, cheaper power and less carbon emissions.
As part of the plan, the state government signed an agreement with steelworks owner GFG Alliance to provide it with hydrogen as it transitioned to green iron and steel.
But that transition had been delayed, and with the company’s debts mounting, the state government made the extraordinary move to force the steelworks into administration.
Government was major customer for hydrogen in original plan
In a tour of the Upper Spencer Gulf in February last year promoting the plan, Mr Malinauskas was adamant it would go ahead, with construction scheduled to begin late in 2024.
He said at the time,
It’s baked in, it’s happening, it’s real,
He said the community could have confidence in the plan because the hydrogen electrolyser was designed to generate power through adjacent generators.
He said,
We’ve got our own customer for the hydrogen we produce and that will be the power plant itself,
“But if there is the opportunity to enter into a commercial life-time agreement to realise the green iron and green steel opportunity then we want to grab that too.”
The opposition has been pushing for a parliamentary committee to inquire into the government’s hydrogen plan, and said the decision to not go ahead was a broken promise.
opposition leader Vincent Tarzia said,
They promised that energy prices would come down by eight per cent with this hydrogen power plant,
“This is basically their only significant energy policy and now it looks like this has been scrapped.”
Money now to be spent on support package
The money that had been budgeted for the hydrogen plan will now make up part of the $2.4 billion dollar support package announced by the federal and state governments.
The bulk of the funding will be spent on new infrastructure at the steelworks once a new owner is found.
Mr Malinauskas told FiveAA radio once that happens, he will enter into discussions about how it will be used.
He said,
We want to sit down with the would-be new owner, whoever that might be and say ‘look, the state government’s got $600 million of capital here, in conjunction with the federal government’s investment’,
“‘Here it is, let’s work together about how you allocate those funds to roll out the transformation of the steelworks’.”
Mr Malinauskas said that could include using it to build a hydrogen facility, but that would depend on the new owner’s priorities.
Office of Hydrogen Power to remain
Despite the news, the state government said its Office of Hydrogen Power will continue operating.
Mr Malinauskas said,
In order to decarbonise iron and steelmaking you need hydrogen, and there is a future for that,
“But the large functions of that office will be curtailed and wound back, now that we defer that plan in order to get the basics right here in terms of the steel mill and the steel plant and the mine.”
Mr Tarzia said the head of that office is paid more than half a million dollars a year, and the government needs to explain why.
He said,
I think it’s now up to the Premier to justify why this guy deserves a salary north of half a million dollars a year,
“By the end of the four years this guy would have been paid $2 million. I mean that is an obscene amount of money, especially for a project that has now been shelved.”
READ the latest news shaping the hydrogen market at Hydrogen Central
Plans for a $600 million hydrogen plant at Whyalla shelved as government announces steelworks support package, source