Business
Scrap metals recycler Romco eyes green hydrogen to power furnaces in Africa
Romco Metals, which recycles scrap aluminium in Nigeria and Ghana, is planning to expand output by more than five times to 100,000 tonnes a year, its CEO said, and is working on a project to create green hydrogen to power its furnaces. Romco, a UK-based non-ferrous metals recycling firm, said it was in advanced talks to raise $50 million in debt and equity to help drive the expansion plan. CEO and founder Raymond Onovwigun said Romco was looking at opening seven new plants in Africa in the next five years to meet growing demand for aluminium. The firm has recently started recycling copper.
Romco’s recycling plants in Nigeria’s commercial capital Lagos and Ghana use compressed natural gas to run furnaces that produce a combined 18,000 tonnes of aluminium ingots a year. “We are looking at using solar, and we are currently working with a UK university taking the solar and creating green hydrogen for heat generation to power our furnaces. This is a medium to long term plan,” Onovwigun said. Green hydrogen, produced from splitting water into hydrogen and oxygen using renewable energy sources such as solar and wind, is seen as key to help decarbonise industry, though the technology remains immature and relatively costly. Reuters
-
Oil and Gas2 days agoNUPRC vows not to approve divestments that doesn’t meet considerations
-
Oil and Gas2 days agoIran eases Strait of Hormuz transit rules amid oil shock
-
Finance2 days agoCardoso seeks collaboration to check cross‑border financial risks
-
Economy2 days agoNigeria to launch trade platform at ports as part of reform push
-
Finance2 days agoCourt nullifies CBN’s regulatory intervention in Union Bank in 2024, rules it acted beyond its powers
-
Oil and Gas2 days agoCourt orders forfeiture of $13m linked to Aisha Achimugu’s firm
-
Oil and Gas2 days agoOil falls as reports of 15-point proposal spurs ceasefire hopes
