EU Green Lights 24 German Hydrogen Projects
The European Commission has approved two Important Projects of Common European Interest (IPCEIs) to ramp up the hydrogen economy in the bloc’s largest economy.
Your company is already operating in Germany and you would now like to export worldwide?
The European Commission has approved two Important Projects of Common European Interest (IPCEIs) to ramp up the hydrogen economy in the bloc’s largest economy.
Quest One has opened a massive production facility for electrolysis stacks in the Rahlstedt district of the northern German city.
The two countries have agreed on a series of measures to bring Australian producers of green hydrogen and its derivatives with European consumers.
Germany’s 16 natural gas transmissions systems operators have requested approval for nearly 10,000 kilometers of lines to distribute green hydrogen as an energy carrier.
Work is now underway on two dozen Important Projects of Common European Interest in Europe’s largest economy.
As part of its H2 Global program, Europe’s largest economy has committed to purchasing 259,000 tons of green ammonia from abroad between 2027 and 2033.
German state natural gas provider Sefe has contracted ten billion cubic meters a year from Norwegian provider Equinor from 2024 to 2034.
Hexagon Purus, maker of high-pressure hydrogen storage tanks, has opened a new production facility in the central German city of Kassel.
Infrastructure investment firm Luxcara is taking over shares of a planned 100-megawatt Hamburg Green Hydrogen Hub (HGHH).
Germany’s regions in structural change are an attractive business location for innovative businesses and companies developing alternative energy storage and mobility models.