No Result
View All Result
Mobile
Subscription
  • Home
  • Britain
  • China
  • Business
  • World
  • Culture
  • Opinion
  • Newspaper
Thursday, March 12, 2026
中文
  • Home
  • Britain
  • China
  • Business
  • World
  • Culture
  • Opinion
  • Newspaper
No Result
View All Result
Sky Eco News
No Result
View All Result

Vopak expects clean energy investments to accelerate towards 2030, CEO says

Vopak expects clean energy investments to accelerate towards 2030, CEO says

FILE PHOTO: The VOPAK oil storage terminal is seen in Johor, Malaysia, March 1, 2018. REUTERS/Henning Gloystein/File Photo

Global tank storage operator Vopak has committed just a fraction of the $1 billion it allocated for energy transition projects by 2030 but expects investments to accelerate towards the end of the decade, CEO Dick Richelle said.

The company has spent a little less than $100 million on the projects in the two years since it made the spending pledge, Richelle told Reuters in an interview.

“Although developments have slowed down, we still see that it kind of moved away from a big hype and dream to much more realism in building these new supply chains going forward,” he said.

Some of the factors that have slowed projects include a lack of government mandates and incentives, higher production costs for alternative fuels and rising construction capital expenditure, he added.

For example, Norway’s Equinor scrapped plans to export hydrogen to Germany because it is too expensive and there is insufficient demand and Repsol put on hold hydrogen projects in Spain due to an unfavourable regulatory environment.

“You need all of those parties at the same time to hold hands and basically jump to make sure that you can establish a whole supply chain,” Richelle said.

“I think that has been slow simply because of the fact that it’s either not clear what incentive you’re going to get at production, or it’s not clear what the mandate is and where you want to sell your product, or the incentive over there in order to import the product.”

Looking ahead, Vopak is focusing on infrastructure projects in four areas of energy transition: biofuels and feedstocks such as sustainable aviation fuel and renewable diesel; hydrogen and hydrogen carriers such as ammonia; carbon dioxide (CO2) value and supply chains; and battery storage.

Vopak plans to capture a bigger share of the biofuels market by converting existing storage tanks for bio-bunker fuel blending in Rotterdam and Singapore, and in the use of biofuels as raw material for fuel and petrochemical production in India, Brazil and Los Angeles, Richelle said.

For ammonia, Vopak is targeting big production centres such as the Middle East and the U.S., and end-markets like Antwerp, Rotterdam, Singapore and South Korea where it operates terminals, he added. The company said in July it had opened an office in Japan to explore opportunities there.

Vopak also has a strong presence in China, a competitive producer of green methanol, where it can facilitate the production and distribution of the alternative fuel, Richelle said.

In carbon storage, the company is working on a project in Rotterdam and has an initial agreement with Australia’s Northern Territory to develop a CO2 import terminal.

Vopak is also making early steps in battery storage investments, having announced a project in Texas earlier this year, Richelle said.

“We see that there’s potentially an important role for Vopak to play as the world moves from the storage of molecules to electrons,” he said.

(Reporting by Florence Tan and Jeslyn Lerh)

Post Related

US opens new unfair-trade probes to rebuild Trump’s tariff pressure

US opens new unfair-trade probes to rebuild Trump’s tariff pressure

U.S. President Donald Trump's administration on Wednesday said it was launching two new trade investigations into excess industrial capacity in...

South Korea fines Mercedes $7.6 million over misleading EV battery information

South Korea fines Mercedes $7.6 million over misleading EV battery information

South Korea's antitrust regulator said on Tuesday it has fined Mercedes-Benz 11.2 billion won ($7.61 million) for misleading consumers about...

German publishers reject Apple’s revised app tracking rules, urge antitrust fine

German publishers reject Apple’s revised app tracking rules, urge antitrust fine

Apple's proposed changes to its app tracking rules do not resolve antitrust issues in the mobile advertising market, associations representing...

Novo and Hims to sell obesity drugs together as feud ends, Bloomberg News reports

Novo and Hims to sell obesity drugs together as feud ends, Bloomberg News reports

Wegovy maker Novo Nordisk plans to sell its weight-loss drugs on Hims & Hers Health platform, bringing an end to...

Dollar jumps as Middle East war sends oil above $100 a barrel

Dollar jumps as Middle East war sends oil above $100 a barrel

The dollar surged on Monday as soaring oil prices sent investors scrambling for cash on worries that a protracted Middle...

Oil surges 20% as Iran war fuels supply fears

Oil surges 20% as Iran war fuels supply fears

Oil prices surged about 20% in early trade on Monday, hitting their highest since July 2022, as the expanding U.S.-Israeli...

Top news

  • Sea drones target oil tankers in the Middle East as conflict risks widen
  • Israel pounds Beirut suburbs after Hezbollah fires volley of rockets
  • US may have struck Iranian girls’ school after using outdated targeting data, sources say
  • US intelligence says Iran government is not at risk of collapse, say sources
  • Trump and Iran signal no quick end to war as tankers burn in Iraqi waters
SKY ECO NEWS

© 2024 SEMG.

About Us

  • Chinese Emassy, London
  • Embassy of the United Kingdom
  • Xinhua
  • People’s Daily
  • China Daily
  • GlobalTimes
  • The Times
  • BBC

Message

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Britain
  • China
  • Business
  • World
  • Culture
  • Opinion
  • Newspaper

© 2024 SEMG.