Mobile Navigation

Sustainability

View Comments

Nuada completes MOF CO2 capture plant at University of Sheffield

| By Mary Bailey

Nuada (Newtownabbey, Northern Ireland) has successfully completed the trial of its second pilot plant, Nuada Scout, at the University of Sheffield. Designed, built and commissioned in under a year, the industrial pilot plant has been capturing carbon dioxide from biomass-derived flue gases at pilot scale, delivering one ton of CO₂ capture per day with high purity and stable performance.

Nuada has developed a solution to capture industrial carbon emissions before they enter the atmosphere, targeting sectors such as cement, lime, and waste-to-energy. Compared to traditional methods, Nuada’s technology is more efficient and cost-effective, requiring 90 per cent less energy than conventional approaches. The system passes industrial emissions through a sponge-like metal-organic framework (MOF) sorbent material, which selectively adsorbs CO₂ molecules. A vacuum process is then used to efficiently extract the captured CO₂, without the need for large-scale chemical plants or complex infrastructure.

Conventional carbon capture methods rely on energy-intensive processes and require large, capital-heavy installations. Their complexity and infrastructure demands make carbon capture deployment costly and disruptive for industrial emitters/sites. In contrast, Nuada’s approach has the potential to eliminate the need for large chemical processing systems, offering a compact, easy-to-integrate and lower-energy solution suitable for widespread industrial deployment.

The pilot forms part of a project awarded funding via the CCUS Innovation 2.0 program, as part of the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero’s £1 billion Net Zero Innovation Portfolio.

Visitors from the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero, the Carbon Capture and Storage Association, and Nuada’s investors recently viewed the pilot plant in operation and heard more about the company’s progress.