A Merseyside road safety improvement is being delivered from a zero-emissions construction compound, powered by green hydrogen, for the first time on a National Highways project.
National Highways, which operates England’s motorways and major A roads, is delivering new pedestrian crossings at the A5036 Dunnings Bridge Road and Park Lane crossroads at Netherton.
All of the electricity for the construction compound is being powered by hydrogen rather than from the grid or diesel generators.
Galliford Try, National Highways’ lead constructor for the £7 million project, has been trialling the use of a hydrogen fuel cell generator to power the site compound. Three site offices, toilets, kitchen, drying room and two EV charging points have all being powered by the hydrogen system since the scheme, due to be completed by Friday 12 June, hit the ground in November.
The pilot project provides a greener and quieter alternative to diesel generators, with the use of green hydrogen, produced sustainably using renewable, emission-free and often surplus wind or solar power.
The trial aligns with both National Highways and Galliford Try’s decarbonisation targets. National Highways is targeting net zero maintenance and construction by 2040. For Galliford Try, this includes a 42% reduction in emissions by 2030.
In 2021, National Highways unveiled its Net Zero Highways Plan with a commitment to delivering net zero corporate emissions by 2030, maintenance and construction emissions by 2040 and road user emissions by 2050.
In February National Highways revealed that green hydrogen would play a key role in powering the construction of the Lower Thames Crossing, which aims to be carbon neutral in construction.
Ian Spence, National Highways’ Park Lane project manager, said:
“This is the first time we have ever operated a compound with hydrogen generators and it’s cutting up to 2.5 tonnes of carbon from the project every week as well as being far cleaner and quieter for local residents as well as staff using the compound.”
Duncan Smith, National Highways’ chief operating officer, said:
“At National Highways we’re totally committed to decarbonising the way we operate, maintain, repair and improve our roads. We expect companies in our supply chain to share those goals, so when I visited the site, I was delighted to see ourselves and Galliford Try working together to trial this new, greener way of running the construction compound.
“It’s a pilot project and as the price of this technology comes down, this has to be the future compared to burning fossil fuels when we cannot connect a site to the grid.”
Poppy Parsons, Head of Low Carbon for Galliford Try, said:
“Diesel Hybrid generators have traditionally been our go-to solution for sites with limited or temporary access to mains power. By switching to green hydrogen, we’ve been able to remove all carbon emissions from site power generation, improve local air quality, and minimise noise disruption.
“The transition has allowed us to show this new technology works in reality, lowering environmental impact without compromising on reliable power, and we are now looking to expand its use within our business.”
Image courtesy of National Highways










