Leipzig-based energy company VNG AG, its wholly-owned gas trading subsidiary VNG Handel & Vertrieb GmbH (VNG H&V) and the Dutch H2 company HyCC are planning to jointly develop an electrolyzer to produce green H2 in Lutherstadt Wittenberg, Germany. The green H2 is intended to help local industries reduce their CO2 emissions.
The electrolyzer will have a capacity of 500 MW to make green H2 from water using renewable electricity. The green H2 can be used by local industry, such as SKW Piesteritz, to replace natural gas in the future and reduce the use of fossil fuels. Thanks to a planned connection to the German H2 network, the GreenRoot project could also supply other industrial customers in the Central German chemical triangle, supporting them on their path to decarbonization. The parties will also look into possible synergies to deliver heat from the plant to the municipal utilities company of Lutherstad Wittenberg.
VNG AG and its subsidiary VNG Handel & Vertrieb are involved in the project as experts in customer-oriented development of the H2 market. As an experienced technical partner, the Dutch company HyCC will contribute valuable expertise in the field of electrolysis.
The partners will begin the approval and consultation phase of the project in 2025 and aim to take the final investment decision in 2026. The plan is to start operations in 2029.
"VNG is strongly positioned along the entire gas value chain. We bring decades of experience in operating gas infrastructure and in the distribution and trading of gas. VNG is currently in the midst of an ambitious transformation process towards green gases such as biogas and green H2. We are therefore delighted to be tackling this groundbreaking project in Lutherstadt Wittenberg together with HyCC and are convinced that we are launching a promising project that fits perfectly into its environment and is already receiving support from local partners,” said Ulf Heitmüller, CEO of VNG AG. "At the same time, projects such as GreenRoot require investments that we can only manage if they are also economically viable. For successful implementation, we therefore also need economic conditions and regulations that enable us to produce green H2 at competitive prices and support the use of H2 by our customers. We still need to work together on this,” continued Ulf Heitmüller.
HyCC builds on decades of experience with electrolysis technology in the chemical industry, including electrolysis facilities operated safely and reliably by its parent company Nobian in Frankfurt and Bitterfeld.
“We build on many years of operational experience with electrolysis technology and believe that Europe, and Germany in particular, is well positioned to be a global front runner in green H2,” said Michel Gantois, CEO of HyCC, “That is why we work closely with VNG to develop a state-of-art facility to support the sustainable development of industries throughout Central Germany.”
Konstantin von Oldenburg, Managing Director of VNG H&V, emphasized, "The domestic production of green H2 in cooperation with our partners and our local customers should strengthen the Central Germany region as an important industrial location and pave the way for sustainable value creation in this region. We want to contribute to the ramp-up of the H2 market together and the appropriate regulatory framework is needed to support this. We therefore advocate that the EU Commission makes the criteria for defining green H2 more flexible and deregulate it as soon as possible. In addition, the funding instrument of the Climate Protection Agreement should be further strengthened and made more pragmatic by the German federal government. In our view, a sustainable stabilization of the greenhouse gas quotas through a triple credit for green H2 and an exemption from network charges for electrolyzers beyond 2030 would also be important for this."
"I am pleased to be able to attend the GreenRoot project presentation, because this project is an important step into the future of our state. Saxony-Anhalt is already a pioneer in the use of renewable energy, both in solar and wind power and we are also well positioned when it comes to green H2. H2 is an important energy source of the future, especially for our chemical industry. I therefore have great hopes for the project of HyCC and VNG and wish it a successful implementation," emphasized Minister President Dr. Reiner Haseloff.
The electrolyzer is to be built on the site of the former waterworks of the city of Wittenberg opposite the Piesteriz agro-chemical park. The site is in the immediate vicinity of SKW Piesteritz, which wants to switch its energy supply from fossil fuels to green H2 in the future.