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Bellona’s recommendations on the hydrogen and decarbonised gas market package

Publish date: April 13, 2022

The current proposal from the European Commission fails to free Europe from a fossil lock-in. Bellona strongly recommends including clear and precise definitions for Low-carbon gases and Renewable gases in the Package, as well as removing the 5% cap for blended hydrogen in the natural gas network.

As already highlighted by Bellona Europa at the release of the package in December 2021, the current proposal from the European Commission fails to free Europe from a fossil lock-in. This has become all the more clear with the release of REPowerEU and a renewed dedication to reducing Europe’s dependency on fossil gas.  

A main point of contention is the gas market package’s reliance on so-called “renewable gases” and “low-carbon gases” which are currently still undefined in the package’s Regulation, and ill-defined in the package’s Directive. To reach its climate targets by 2030 and 2050, the EU increasingly relies on both low-carbon and renewable gases. The current lack of a climate framework and sustainability criteria for these gases draws into question their contribution, if any, to climate change mitigation. 

The package also fails to address one of the most critical issues: the targeted use of low-carbon and renewable gases. These gases will remain a limited feedstock, and their use should be targeted, and limited, to those sectors that cannot otherwise decarbonise – such as the production of fertilisers and long-distance shipping. To decarbonise, these sectors need a pure feedstock. Providing them with blended hydrogen through fossil gas pipelines, which means an impure feedstock, will not contribute to decarbonisation in those sectors that require it most. Instead, blended hydrogen risks being used in sectors that can be decarbonised otherwise– such as home heating through electrification. Using blended hydrogen in these sectors won’t provide any substantial decarbonisation due to the scale needed and would be an incredibly inefficient use of a precious resource: low-carbon and renewable gasses. 

Additionally, blending justifies continued investments into fossil gas infrastructure under the guise of a potential shift to hydrogen in the future. This justification does not take into account that such a shift is not only unlikely to take place due to high costs and energy inefficiencies, it also requires dedicated, new hydrogen infrastructure. With dedicated hydrogen infrastructure being different from the fossil gas infrastructure in use with blending, blending is not a necessary stepping-stone in the direction of a decarbonised gas grid. Investments into fossil gas infrastructure justified by blending comes at the direct expense of investments into no-regret dedicated hydrogen infrastructure in industrial clusters.  

Moreover, if  Europe used all its electricity to produce hydrogen, it would only be able to substitute 45% of the current European fossil gas demand. It is safe to assume that there would never be enough renewable and low-carbon gases to fully replace all the fossil gas currently filling the European gas grid. The promised full shift from blending to a fully decarbonised gas grid would simply not happen. Investing in the current gas grid that is ‘hydrogen-ready’, with blending as a prioritised stepping-stone, is thus a waste of resources for an asset that is not fit to deliver a decarbonised world in line with the Paris Agreement. 

As Bellona Europa’s analysis of REPowerEU shows, electricity use must be prioritised for direct electrification applications. This is due to their comparatively higher effectiveness in achieving a higher fossil gas displacement compared to hydrogen production. It is therefore vital that the definition of both renewable and low-carbon gases ensures that these gases contribute to emission reductions and have a concrete climate benefit. 

Based on this analysis, it is therefore Bellona Europa’s strong recommendation that:  

Such definitions must be included both in the Directive and Regulation – the latter in particular is currently lacking. This would ensure consistency and safeguard the EU’s climate credibility. The definition and accompanying accounting included in the Hydrogen and Gas market decarbonisation package must take into account the 3 factors listed below to reflect the entire climate impact of these fuels:

        1. The GHG intensity of the energy input
        2.  The carbon input, if there is any, and its origin
        3. The upstream emissions of the feedstock used to produce the gas/fuel

definitions for low-carbon gases and low-carbon hydrogen

  • Remove the 5% cap for blended hydrogen in the natural gas network. 

    Instead of a 5% target for blending, prioritise the use of hydrogen in industries where it’s most necessary and where there are no other alternatives (like direct electrification).
     

 

Download here:

Bellona Europa Recommendations on the Hydrogen and Decarbonized Gas Market Package