- The list of Projects of Common Interest (PCI) will be submitted to the Council and the European Parliament for final approval in early 2024.
- Enagás advances in the analysis of the results of the Call For Interest for the Hydrogen Backbone in Spain, which will be presented at the 2nd Enagás Hydrogen Day on 31 January.
The European Commission has adopted the Delegated Act on Projects of Common Interest (PCI) which includes the H2Med corridor, the first axes of the associated Spanish Hydrogen Backbone Network and two underground hydrogen storage facilities. Their inclusion in the list of PCIs, which will be submitted to the Council and the European Parliament for approval in early 2024, represents an important step forward in the promotion of these projects.
The H2Med comprises a connection between Celourico da Beira in Portugal and Zamora (CelZa), and a maritime connection between Barcelona and Marseille (BarMar). With a planned combined investment of around 2.5 billion euros, CelZa will have a maximum capacity of 0.75 million tonnes of renewable hydrogen, a length of 248 kilometres and a 24.6 MW compressor station in Zamora, and BarMar will have a maximum capacity of two million tonnes, a length of 455 kilometres and a 140 MW compressor station in Barcelona.
H2Med was presented in Alicante at the Euromed summit on 9 December 2022 by the governments of Portugal, Spain and France, with the support of the President of the European Commission, Ursula Von Der Leyen, and in January 2023 the support of Germany was added. Following this initial impulse, the TSOs of Portugal, Spain, France and Germany presented the project at an event in Berlin on 18 October, ratifying the support of the governments of these four countries and that of the European Commission, as well as that of the industry and the main players of the sector in Germany.
Progress on the Spanish Hydrogen Backbone
The first sections of the Spanish Hydrogen Backbone included as a PCI are the Vía de la Plata Axis with its connection to the Puertollano Hydrogen Valley -which add up to a planned length of approximately 1,250 km-, and the Axis that includes the Cantabrian Coast, Ebro Valley and Levante Axes -about 1,500 km in total-, as well as two underground hydrogen storage facilities in Cantabria and the Basque Country, located in new salt cavities, with a planned capacity of 335 and 240 GWh, respectively.
The Spanish Hydrogen Backbone Network projects, together with the storage facilities identified as necessary for its correct operation, involves an investment of around 4.6 billion euros.
Enagás is making progress in analysing the results after successfully completing the first phase of the non-binding Call For Interest process for the first axes of the Spanish Hydrogen Backbone on 17 November. With the data provided by the more than 200 companies - producers, consumers, marketers and other agents - that have submitted more than 600 projects, the company will be able to gauge the interest of the main players in the energy sector in the necessary development of renewable hydrogen transport infrastructures, as well as ammonia, oxygen and CO2.
The information provided in this Call for Interest will also make it possible to adjust the routes and to detect whether it is necessary to incorporate sections that were not initially included in the first axes presented. Enagás will announce the results of the Call for Interest at the 2nd Hydrogen Day, to be held on 31 January 2024.
The inclusion of the H2Med corridor, the Spanish Hydrogen Backbone and the two underground hydrogen storage facilities in the PCI list -once it passes through the European Parliament and Council- will help to make progress in fulfilling the RePowerEU Plan to achieve the European and Spanish goals of energy independence, industrial competitiveness and decarbonization.
About Enagás
Enagás is Spain’s TSO (Transmission System Operator) and Technical Manager of the Spanish gas system, with 50 years’ experience in the development, operation and maintenance of energy infrastructures. It has more than 12,000 kilometres of gas pipelines, three strategic storage facilities, eight regasification plants. The company operates in seven countries: Spain, the United States, Mexico, Peru, Albania, Greece and Italy. Enagás participates as shareholder in Trans Adriatic Pipeline (TAP), crossing these last three countries, a key infrastructure for the security of supply in Europe.
In accordance with its commitment to the energy transition, Enagás has announced that it is bringing forward its goal of becoming carbon neutral to 2040. The company is committed to the development of renewable gases infrastructure, mainly hydrogen, sustainable mobility and energy efficiency, among other areas. Together with the TSOs of Portugal and France, Enagás submitted the H2Med project to the call for European Projects of Common Interest (PCIs). It also presented to this call the Spanish Hydrogen Backbone, linked to the mentioned interconnection.