Baker Hughes and Woodside Energy have announced a joint initiative to develop a lower carbon power generation technology solution utilising the Net Power platform that is specifically designed for oil and gas (including LNG), heavy industries and other smaller scale applications.
Building on their 2022 memorandum of understanding (MoU), which aimed to advance the decarbonization of the natural gas supply chain, Baker Hughes and Woodside have now signed a technology development agreement (TDA), to develop the small-scale net power platform. The patented net power platform works by utilising natural gas to generate affordable power while inherently capturing nearly all carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions.
Baker Hughes and Woodside aim to bring other development partners into the program to tailor the concept to the continuously evolving requirements of different captive power generation segments. Through the TDA, the program will also focus on assessing feasibility and industrial market scalability of Net Power’s platform.
Baker Hughes is the exclusive provider of the small-scale application of the net power platform, and the TDA will benefit from the development and testing currently ongoing both at Net Power’s La Porte, Texas, US, demonstration facility and the company’s planned first utility-scale power plant near Midland, Texas.
Woodside executive vice president technical and energy development Julie Fallon says: ‘We are excited to continue our collaboration with Baker Hughes and leverage their leading-edge technology and our combined engineering and CCUS capabilities to explore and develop lower-carbon emissions alternative power solutions using Net Power’s platform.’