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German union concurs funding information of hydrogen network

Germany's ruling union on Friday concurred a funding mechanism for the nation's future hydrogen network, extending a due date for it to be constructed by five years to 2037 and providing protection for financiers in case of personal bankruptcy.

Numerous countries are betting on hydrogen, which can be used in part to replace natural gas, as they seek to decarbonise their economies and find ways to soak up periodic renewable supplies into the power grid. Germany, which was heavily dependent on Russian gas until the Ukraine war began, is particularly eager to move towards hydrogen.

The country's core network for hydrogen fuel will extend over 9,700 km (6,000 miles) and cost around 20 billion euros ($ 21.6 billion), with existing gas pipelines comprising 60% of the network.

The energy policy lawmakers of the federal government's 3 coalition parties on Friday agreed on the network's information that will be gone over and are anticipated to be agreed by the lower home of parliament next week, the legislators stated in a joint statement.

According to the agreement, the network needs to remain in location by 2037 at the latest, 5 years beyond the original due date to try to ease the monetary burden for the operators, legislator for the Social Democrats Nina Scheer stated.

The job will be funded through user charges and constructed by personal business, and to encourage financial investment in technology that is in its infancy, the network operators will not be responsible if one operator declares bankruptcy, with a federal government guarantee of around 6.7% return on equity before taxes.

The Economy Ministry has actually been considering what it describes as an amortisation account to cover the network construction expenses over a long period to avoid passing the total to current customers, with plans to have the expenses paid back by 2055.

If, nevertheless, demand is weak and the marketplace fails to take off, network operators will need to take on some 24% of the costs, the celebrations concurred.

The federal government is only partly responsible in the not likely circumstance that the core network ramp-up fails, the agreement said

The BDEW energies lobby welcomed the contract however said. investors ought to be provided more security versus the loss of capital.

The litmus test will be whether or not real financial investment choices are made on the basis of the agreement, Germany's. association of regional energies, VKU, said in a statement.

(source: Reuters)