The Pak Banker

RWE plans to produce hydrogen from renewable energy

- FRANKFURT -AFP

Germany's RWE plans to produce hydrogen from renewable energy to supply steelmaker Thyssenkru­pp, the two companies told Reuters. The alliance between two of Germany's heaviest polluters comes as Europe's largest economy maps out a future without nuclear or coal power.

RWE is currently heavily reliant on coal but is able to enter the hydrogen business due to changes to Germany's laws as the government looks to boost hydrogen production.

The planned cooperatio­n between the two sector leaders is aimed at using green hydrogen, where the electricit­y used in the electrolys­is that separates hydrogen from water comes from renewable sources.

RWE plans to build a 100 megawatt hydrogen plant in the state of Lower Saxony to supply Thyssenkru­pp's steel operations in Duisburg by the middle of the decade, the companies said, responding to a Reuters request for comment. Steelmakin­g accounts for 7-9% of global emissions and has long been considered an ideal use case for hydrogen.

The plant will be able to deliver 1.7 tonnes of hydrogen gas per hour, or about 70% of that required by a blast furnace which Thyssenkru­pp plans to install, they said.

This could produce 50,000 tonnes of climateneu­tral steel per year, enough needed to make as many cars, they said.

Thyssenkru­pp produces 11 million tonnes of steel a year but the partnershi­p would mark a start and reflects an industry-wide shift toward greener energy as rivals, including heavyweigh­t ArcelorMit­tal, start to explore the technology.

"Climate neutrality in the steel sector is possible and we're accelerati­ng the switch with regard to our production," said Bernhard Osburg, CEO of Thyssenkru­pp Steel Europe.

Germany has committed 9 billion euros ($10.2 billion) to expand hydrogen capacity at home and abroad as part of a national strategy to make the country a key supplier of the

technology worldwide.

The companies said the partnershi­p was dependent on the developmen­t of a hydrogen transport network.

Roger Miesen, CEO of RWE's Generation divi

sion, said the government's strategy needed to be implemente­d fast to ensure an effective hydrogen expansion. "Investment decisions require planning certainty."

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