Hydrogen pipe agreement maintains industry commitment requirement - but opens up for phased solution

The government and agreeing parties are sticking to demands for financial and legal commitments previously considered unrealistic by the industry, but the former are open to a phased solution. 
Danish energy minister Lars Aagaard is pleased that the framework for the hydrogen pipe is now in place. | Photo: Hannah Aurora Almstrup
Danish energy minister Lars Aagaard is pleased that the framework for the hydrogen pipe is now in place. | Photo: Hannah Aurora Almstrup

A hydrogen pipe down through Jutland, Denmark, will obviously not be cheap. Nor is it without risk. That is why the Danish government and the parties to the agreement want the users of a future hydrogen pipeline to make a commitment. 

Already a subscriber?Log in here

Read the whole article

Get access for 14 days for free. No credit card is needed, and you will not be automatically signed up for a paid subscription after the free trial.

With your free trial you get:

  • Access all locked articles
  • Receive our daily newsletters
  • Access our app
  • Must be at least 8 characters, including three of: Uppercase, lowercase, numbers, symbols
    Must contain at least 2 characters
    Must contain at least 2 characters

    Get full access for you and your coworkers

    Start a free company trial today

    Share article

    Sign up for our newsletter

    Stay ahead of development by receiving our newsletter on the latest sector knowledge.

    Newsletter terms

    Front page now

    On June 1, Senvion's former CFO Manav Sharma started as US country manager for Nordex. Soon he will have a new factory at his disposal. | Foto: Senvion

    Nordex restarts production in the US

    For subscribers

    Further reading