
The European Commission has approved $469 million in state aid for Austria and Lithuania to boost renewable hydrogen production. The funding aims to support industrial decarbonization and reduce reliance on Russian fossil fuels, aligning with the EU's Clean Industrial Deal and REPowerEU Plan.
Austria will receive $435 million, enabling the production of up to 112,000 tonnes of renewable hydrogen. Lithuania's $39 million allocation will support the production of 13,000 tonnes. These efforts are expected to prevent a combined 597,000 tonnes of CO2 emissions.
The funding will be distributed through a competitive bidding process managed by the European Climate, Infrastructure, and Environment Executive Agency (CINEA), with the auction set to close in 2025. Beneficiaries will receive direct grants per kilogram of hydrogen produced, with a maximum funding period of ten years.
The Commission’s evaluation confirmed that these schemes are vital to increasing renewable hydrogen production, reducing emissions, and achieving national and EU-level energy goals. The financial aid will incentivize investments that would otherwise be unfeasible, while safeguarding competition within the EU.
This initiative underscores the EU’s ongoing commitment to advancing clean energy and sustainable hydrogen technologies as part of its green transition.
Source: solarquarter.com