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Italy, Germany, Austria sign cooperation deal on southern hydrogen link

Italy, Germany and Austria have signed an arrangement to work together on the advancement of a network to transfer hydrogen from the southern Mediterranean to northern Europe, the energy ministries of the three nations said on Thursday.

The main announcement, which confirms what sources told on Tuesday, marks a concrete step in the European Union's technique to protect sustainable hydrogen products by 2030 to assist decarbonise its most polluting industries.

The Southern Hydrogen Passage will supply renewable hydrogen imports from North Africa through southern Italy and further connect to the significant hydrogen demand hubs in Italy, Austria and Germany, the German ministry said in a statement.

The link called SoutH2, which in 2015 won top priority status from the European Commission, is thought about important to develop a European market for the sustainable fuel.

A group of companies consisting of Italian gas grid operator Snam has collaborated to build the SoutH2 pipeline by the start of the next decade, with a financial dedication of more than 4 billion euros ($ 4.3 billion).

The southern passage will play an essential role, particularly in supplying the southern German states with green hydrogen, Germany's Minister for Economic Affairs and Environment Defense Robert Habeck said in a declaration.

In 2015 sources informed Italy was in initial talks with Bavaria's federal government to provide gas and hydrogen to the southern German state, including Rome likewise intended to offer energy to Austria.

The European Union intends to produce 10 million metric tons and import 10 million lots of green hydrogen by 2030 in a quote to change nonrenewable fuel sources, which emit planet-warming gases when burned.

Green hydrogen is produced by splitting water through electrolysis utilizing renewable resource.

(source: Reuters)