
On the eve of yet another EU High Level Conference on Hydrogen on May 5, 2026 we like to present you with a quick handy overview of current, H2 relevant, EU policy as handy summary and reality check. With courtesy of Mistral…….
EU Hydrogen Strategy & Green Deal Alignment
Key Developments
- EU Hydrogen Strategy Revision (2026):
The European Commission will revise the EU Hydrogen Strategy in 2026, following a public consultation in Q2 2026 to re-evaluate targets and reorient focus. The strategy remains central to the EU Green Deal, positioning hydrogen as a carbon-neutral energy carrier for:- Energy storage (seasonal balancing, backup power).
- Decarbonizing hard-to-abate sectors (steel, chemicals, heavy industry).
- Transport (maritime, aviation, heavy-duty road, rail).
- Repurposing gas pipelines to avoid stranded assets and enable cross-border hydrogen trade.
- Phased Roadmap:
- Phase 1 (2020–2024): 6 GW of renewable hydrogen electrolysers (1 Mt production).
- Phase 2 (2025–2030): 40 GW of electrolysers (10 Mt production), with binding targets for industry/transport uptake (42% of hydrogen in industry must be renewable by 2030, 60% by 2035).
- Phase 3 (2030–2050): Large-scale deployment to cover ~23% of EU energy mix by 2050.
- REPowerEU (2022):
- Doubled hydrogen ambitions: 10 Mt domestic + 10 Mt imported renewable hydrogen by 2030.
- European Hydrogen Bank: Launched in 2023 with €3 billion to bridge the cost gap between renewable hydrogen and fossil fuels. The first pilot auction (2024) allocated €720 million to support 1.58 Mt of renewable hydrogen over 10 years.
- Hydrogen Mechanism (2025): Accelerates market development by matching supply/demand, guiding infrastructure, and linking projects to financing (e.g., Innovation Fund).
Energy Policy & Market Regulation
Key Developments
- Hydrogen and Decarbonised Gas Market Package (2024):
- Directive (EU) 2024/1788 and Regulation (EU) 2024/1789 (adopted May 2024, transposition deadline: mid-2026):
- Establishes a regulatory framework for dedicated hydrogen infrastructure (pipelines, storage, terminals).
- Introduces ENNOH (European Network of Network Operators for Hydrogen): Will draft 10-year EU-wide hydrogen network development plans (TYNDP) starting in 2028 and coordinate cross-border trade.
- Unbundling rules: Separates hydrogen production/supply from network operation to ensure fair access.
- Tariff discounts for hydrogen to incentivize market uptake.
- Directive (EU) 2024/1788 and Regulation (EU) 2024/1789 (adopted May 2024, transposition deadline: mid-2026):
- Renewable Energy Directive (RED III, 2023):
- Binding targets:
- 42% of hydrogen used in industry must be renewable (RFNBOs) by 2030, rising to 60% by 2035.
- 5.5% sub-target for advanced biofuels/RFNBOs in transport (1% from RFNBOs).
- FuelEU Maritime & ReFuelEU Aviation: Mandate 2% SAF (synthetic aviation fuel) by 2025, 6% by 2030 (1.2% from hydrogen-based fuels).
- Delegated Acts (2023–2025):
- RFNBOs (Renewable Fuels of Non-Biological Origin): Strict criteria for additionality, temporal/geographic correlation (e.g., hydrogen must be produced with new renewable energy).
- Low-Carbon Hydrogen Delegated Act (July 2025): Defines 70% GHG savings threshold for low-carbon hydrogen (e.g., blue hydrogen, nuclear-based). Public consultation in 2026 on PPAs for nuclear energy.
- Binding targets:
- Net-Zero Industry Act (2024):
- 40% of EU’s annual deployment needs for net-zero technologies (e.g., electrolysers, fuel cells) must be manufactured domestically by 2030, aiming for 15% of global production by 2040.
- Clean Industrial Deal (CID, February 2025):
- Prioritizes hydrogen as a key technology for industrial decarbonization (steel, chemicals, refining).
- State Aid Framework (CISAF, June 2025): Flexible support for renewable hydrogen projects, with tax incentives for electrolysers and fuel switching.
- Steel & Metals Action Plan: Addresses hydrogen grid access and infrastructure development for hard-to-abate sectors.
Transport Policy
Key Developments
- Alternative Fuels Infrastructure Regulation (AFIR, 2024):
- Mandates hydrogen refueling stations along TEN-T core network by 2030 (every 200 km for heavy-duty vehicles).
- FuelEU Maritime & ReFuelEU Aviation:
- Maritime: 2% renewable fuels (including hydrogen-based) by 2034, rising to 80% by 2050.
- Aviation: 6% SAF by 2030 (1.2% from hydrogen-based e-fuels).
- TEN-T Regulation (2024):
- Recognizes hydrogen pipelines, terminals, and storage as Projects of Common Interest (PCIs), eligible for streamlined permitting and EU funding.
- European Hydrogen Backbone: Industry-led initiative to build 31,000 km of hydrogen pipelines by 2030 (60% repurposed gas pipelines), expanding to 53,000 km by 2040.
- National Transport Initiatives:
- Germany: Hydrogen Acceleration Act (2025) simplifies permitting for hydrogen infrastructure (e.g., pipelines, storage). White Book on Hydrogen Storage (2025) estimates 2–7 TWh storage demand by 2030, requiring €32.5–54.2 billion investment by 2050.
- France: Focus on synthetic fuels for aviation/maritime and 500 km of hydrogen pipelines by mid-term.
- Romania: National Hydrogen Strategy (2025–2030) targets 153,000 tons of renewable hydrogen by 2030, primarily for transport (72,400 tons) and heavy industry (80,700 tons).
Industry & Defense Policy
Key Developments
- Industrial Decarbonization:
- Binding RFNBO targets for industry: 42% by 2030, 60% by 2035 (RED III).
- IPCEIs (Important Projects of Common European Interest):
- IPCEI Hy2Tech (2022): 41 projects for hydrogen value chain technologies (electrolysers, fuel cells).
- IPCEI Hy2Use (2022): Supports hydrogen infrastructure (pipelines, storage).
- IPCEI Hy2Infra (2024): Focuses on electrolysers, pipelines, and terminals.
- IPCEI Hy2Move (2024): Covers hydrogen mobility (trucks, trains, ships).
- Clean Hydrogen Partnership (2021–2027): €2 billion for R&D in production, storage, and end-use (e.g., Hydrogen Valleys).
- Defense & Energy Security:
- ReArm Europe Plan (March 2025): €800 billion to strengthen EU defense capabilities, competing for resources with green transition investments.
- Strategic Autonomy: Hydrogen seen as a domestic alternative to fossil fuel imports, reducing dependency on Russia, China, and other suppliers. European Hydrogen Bank supports import diversification (e.g., partnerships with North Africa, Australia).
- Critical Raw Materials Act: Secures supply chains for electrolyser materials (e.g., platinum, iridium), with China (37%) and South Africa (11%) as major suppliers.
Infrastructure & Standards
Key Developments
- Hydrogen Infrastructure:
- Current status: 16 operational hydrogen pipelines (1,564 km) in EU, mostly for petrochemicals. 70 retrofitting projects underway to repurpose gas pipelines (50–80% cost savings).
- Investment needs:
- €86–126 billion (REPowerEU estimate) to €300–450 billion by 2035 (alternative studies) for full value chain.
- €1.9–2.5 trillion over 30 years for electrolysers, storage, and networks.
- Standards & Certification:
- Certification schemes: CertifHy, REDcert, ISCC EU recognized for RFNBO and low-carbon hydrogen trade.
- New standards (2025): 14 revised/developed standards for hydrogen fuel cells, refueling stations, pipes, and valves.
Funding & Financial Instruments
| Instrument | Focus Area | Budget/Funding | Key Details |
|---|---|---|---|
| Innovation Fund | Renewable hydrogen production | €720M (2024 auction) | Supports 1.58 Mt/year of renewable hydrogen over 10 years. |
| European Hydrogen Bank | Bridge cost gap for renewable H₂ | €3B (2023–2030) | Pilot auctions for domestic/imported hydrogen. |
| Hydrogen Mechanism | Demand aggregation, infrastructure | N/A | Matches buyers/sellers, links to financing (e.g., Innovation Fund). |
| IPCEIs | Value chain (production, infrastructure) | €10B+ (Member States) | Hy2Tech, Hy2Use, Hy2Infra, Hy2Move for electrolysers, pipelines, mobility. |
| CEF Transport/Energy | Hydrogen pipelines, refueling stations | €5.8B (CINEA portfolio) | 244 projects across production, networks, and transport. |
| Recovery & Resilience Facility | Hydrogen projects | €800B (NextGenerationEU) | Temporary instrument for clean energy investments (ends 2026). |
| Clean Industrial Deal | Industrial decarbonization | N/A | Tax incentives, state aid for hydrogen technologies. |
Challenges & Outlook
Key Challenges
- Cost Competitiveness:
- Renewable hydrogen remains 2–3x more expensive than fossil-based hydrogen (€3–12/kg vs. €2.94/kg for SMR in 2023).
- High capital costs (electrolysers, infrastructure) and rising interest rates hinder project viability.
- Infrastructure Gaps:
- Limited pipeline network (1,564 km vs. 200,000 km for gas).
- Storage needs: 2–7 TWh by 2030 (Germany alone).
- Regulatory Uncertainty:
- Slow transposition of RED III and Hydrogen/Gas Package (only Denmark, Ireland fully transposed by May 2025).
- Disagreements on low-carbon hydrogen (e.g., nuclear, CCS) and import reliance.
- Market Uptake:
- Demand-side mandates (e.g., 42% RFNBO in industry by 2030) not yet fully implemented by Member States.
- Project cancellations in 2024–2025 due to high costs, permitting delays.
Outlook (2026–2030)
- 2026:
- ENNOH operational (EU-wide hydrogen network planning).
- Revised EU Hydrogen Strategy (new targets, focus on low-carbon hydrogen).
- First TYNDP for hydrogen (2028).
- 2030:
- 40 GW electrolysers (10 Mt production).
- 10 Mt domestic + 10 Mt imported hydrogen.
- 5.5% RFNBO in transport, 42% in industry.
National Highlights (2025–2026)
| Country | Key Policy/Strategy | Targets |
|---|---|---|
| Germany | Hydrogen Acceleration Act (2025), White Book on Storage | 10 GW electrolysers by 2030, 2–7 TWh storage by 2030. |
| France | Updated Hydrogen Strategy (2025) | 4.5 GW electrolysers by 2030, 8 GW by 2035; 500 km pipelines. |
| Italy | National Hydrogen Strategy (2024) | 15–30 GW electrolysers by 2050; 70% domestic production. |
| Romania | National Hydrogen Strategy (2025–2030) | 153,000 tons renewable H₂ by 2030 (72,400 tons for transport). |
| Austria | Hydrogen Roadmap (2025) | Southern Hydrogen Corridor (link to North Africa via Italy). |
| Spain | Draft Royal Decree on Renewable Fuels (2025) | Hydrogen import hub (North Africa). |
Summary of Key Takeaways
- Regulatory Framework Nearly Complete:
- RED III, Hydrogen/Gas Package, Net-Zero Industry Act provide binding targets, infrastructure rules, and manufacturing incentives.
- ENNOH and TYNDP will drive cross-border hydrogen networks from 2026.
- Funding & Market Support:
- €3B Hydrogen Bank, Innovation Fund auctions, and IPCEIs are de-risking investments.
- Clean Industrial Deal aligns state aid and tax incentives with hydrogen deployment.
- Transport & Industry Mandates:
- 42% renewable hydrogen in industry by 2030, 5.5% in transport (1% RFNBO).
- FuelEU Maritime/ReFuelEU Aviation push hydrogen-based fuels in shipping/aviation.
- Infrastructure & Standards:
- 31,000 km hydrogen pipelines by 2030 (60% repurposed gas).
- Certification schemes (CertifHy, REDcert, ISCC) enable trade and compliance.
- Challenges:
- Cost gap (renewable H₂ 2–3x more expensive than fossil).
- Slow transposition of EU rules by Member States.
- Competition for resources (e.g., ReArm Europe Plan vs. green transition).
- Outlook:
- 2026: Revised Hydrogen Strategy, ENNOH operational.
- 2030: 40 GW electrolysers, 20 Mt hydrogen (10 Mt domestic + 10 Mt imported).
Photo courtesy of Oman Hydrogen Centre: Kawasaki Suiso Frontier 1,250 m3, 75t Liquid Hydrogen Carrier docking at Sultan Qaboos Port in 2023 in happier Hormuz times.