Skip to main content

News

RWE plans H2-ready combined-cycle gas turbine at Gersteinwerk in Werne

RWE is planning to build H2-ready gas-fired power plants at the company's power plant sites in Germany to contribute to a successful coal phase-out by 2030. Following Weisweiler in the Rhenish mining area, the company is now pressing ahead with plans for such a plant at a possible second site in Werne in the southern Münsterland region. An H2-ready combined-cycle gas turbine (CCGT) power plant with a nominal capacity of around 800 MW may be built at the Gersteinwerk power plant.

Following intensive technical soundings, RWE has commissioned an Italian-Spanish consortium to plan the project. Work on the planning approval process is already underway.

Nikolaus Valerius, CEO RWE Generation SE said, "With the approval planning for a H2-ready gas-fired power plant at the Gersteinwerk, we are taking proactive measures to keep the chance of completion by 2030 open. With the construction of the new power plant, we are ready to contribute to green security of supply and thus secure the coal phase-out by 2030. This requires policymakers to quickly make some key decisions. We can only make a final investment decision once the connection of the site to a H2 network has been secured and the framework conditions allow for a commercially viable operation of the power plants."

The German government has announced that its power plant strategy will soon create a regulatory framework for tendering H2-ready gas-fired power plants. RWE intends to participate in these tenders. According to the recently presented plans for the construction of a H2 infrastructure in Germany, the Gerstein plant in Werne could be located close to a H2 transport pipeline in the future.

A consortium consisting of Ansaldo Energia (Italy) and Tecnicas Reunidas (Spain) has won RWE's tender for the H2-ready CCGT. The contract signed by the three partners includes approval planning for the power plant as a first step.

Work on the planning process is already underway. This is the prerequisite for RWE to be able to start implementing the project as soon as an investment decision has been made. According to current planning, the plant in Werne could start producing electricity by 2030. At the time of commissioning, the plant should be able to use a fuel mix with at least 50% H2 content, and it is intended to run it entirely on H2 at a later stage.