Jennie Morrison, director for sHYp BV in Scotland

Green tech start-up takes tenancy at The James Hutton Institute

FAST-growing green hydrogen technology start-up sHYp has moved into offices and laboratory space at The James Hutton Institute in Aberdeen ...

Facebook
LinkedIn
X

Subscribe to our daily newsletter

Why? Free to subscribe, no paywall, daily business news digest.

FAST-growing green hydrogen technology start-up sHYp has moved into offices and laboratory space at The James Hutton Institute in Aberdeen with plans to expand to five staff on site by summer.

The move gives sHYp access to the institute’s specialist analytical equipment and expertise. This will help it to develop what could be the first electrolyser able to produce hydrogen from sea water, without the need for desalination, which traditional electrolysis techniques need. 

sHYp says its technology, which splits seawater into hydrogen and oxygen using renewable electricity, would also be able to extract by-products such as carbon dioxide and magnesium hydroxide, used in building and pharmaceuticals. This means it could add valuable income streams and reduce the price to customers of its green hydrogen

The technology could then help any power users close to or at sea, such as ports and offshore vessels and facilities, to harness any surplus offshore renewable energy they produce by turning it into hydrogen.

Professor Deborah Roberts, Deputy Chief Executive and Director of Science at The James Hutton Institute, says, “We are excited to welcome sHYp to our Craigiebuckler campus. We believe that having leading-edge companies like sHYP co-locate with us, sharing our facilities and social spaces, will benefit both us and them and, ultimately, help to stimulate innovation for the benefit of Aberdeen and our wider society as a whole.”

Jennie Morrison, director for sHYp BV in Scotland, now based at the institute, says, “We’re really happy to be here at The James Hutton Institute where we will be able to work on and develop our technology and grow our team in-house, instead of having to rely on external laboratory support. 

“Laboratory space and access to specialist analytical and characterisation equipment can be challenging, but it will be invaluable to us as we develop our technology here in Scotland. It’s also important to us to be based in Scotland, which we see as leading the way in hydrogen technology development and could be a hydrogen exporter in years to come.”

sHYp was recently awarded funding from the Net Zero Technology Centre, which will allow it to increase its staffing from one to five in Aberdeen by summer. The first appointment will be an electrochemist, starting in March.

The Delaware, US, based company, set up in 2019, joins a growing cohort of businesses based at The James Hutton Institute, supporting its Open Campus strategy.

Other companies now on site include GlykoGen, which is developing cancer treating antibodies, Isotopic, which performs geochemical studies for industry, Aberdeen City Council’s Scientific Services Laboratory, which supports everything from testing water quality to checking food and commercial goods production compliance and regional community climate action support hub NESCAN.

Related Articles

Unique building available to buy or let at Aberdeen Innovation Park
Balnagask RAAC demolitions to begin
Aberdeen approves 9.5% rent rise from April
Housebuilder submits plans to deliver new homes and long-awaited £4million link road in Aberdeen
AI bonds in focus as Aberdeen Investments taps new opportunities
Compensation fund call for homeowners along 70-mile pylon route

Other Articles from ABN