Denmark has selected six projects that will produce renewable hydrogen and derivatives with a combined electrolyser capacity of 280MW in its first power-to-X tender, the Danish Energy Agency (DEA) said today.
The six projects will each get a share of the tender's 1.25bn Danish kroner budget ($176.9mn). They will receive the subsidies as a fixed support over 10 years. Overall, the tender could support around 30,000 t/yr of renewable hydrogen production, Argus calculations show (see table). Some of the output will be used to make derivatives such as e-methanol.
Participants had to submit fixed bids on the support sought in DKr/GJ of output and the lowest bidders were selected. Five projects were awarded the full support requested, while a project developed by domestic firms HyproDenmark and Everfuel will only receive part of the requested subsidies as it submitted the sixth-lowest bid.
Denmark-headquartered European Energy was successful with three projects. This includes a facility at Padborg with 150MW electrolyser capacity, which will receive over 70pc of the total funds. The plant will use renewable hydrogen to make e-methanol, European Energy said, but the firm declined to disclose its construction timeline.
US firm Plug Power submitted by far the lowest bid, requesting support of just DKr9.3/GJ — equivalent to around 16¢/kg assuming an energy density of 120MJ/kg — for a plant in Holstebro with 100MW electrolyser capacity. This was less than one-fourth of the next lowest bid.
Overall interest in the tender was strong, the DEA said. Bids submitted amounted to support requests for more than DKr4bn — more than three times the budget — for a total electrolyser capacity of around 675MW.
The subsidies will help realise the selected facilities, thereby supporting Denmark's aim of reaching 4-6GW of electrolyser capacity by 2030, the DEA said. "It is the first time that we have received an indication of the need for support for the green hydrogen, and it is a strong signal that so many projects have bid below DKr70/GJ," DEA deputy director Martin Hansen said.
Today's decision will be followed by a "10-day standstill period" during which any complaints could be filed, the DEA said. The agency will then enter into contracts with the successful projects. The developers have four years to build and commission the facilities, the DEA said, suggesting that sites would have to be ready by late 2027. Some projects could enter operations earlier, the agency said.
Selected projects in Danish tender | |||||||
Developer/Project | Location | Support in DKK/GJ | Support in $/kg* | Project electrolyser capacity | Total support in $mn | Subsidised H2 output in t/yr* | Product |
Plug Power Idomlund | Holstebro | 9.3 | 0.16 | 100 | 15.1 | 9,648 | TBC |
European Energy/Vindtestcenter Made | Esbjerg | 40.0 | 0.67 | 9 | 6.2 | 917 | H2 |
European Energy/Padborg PtX | Padborg | 46.0 | 0.77 | 150 | 127.5 | 16,500 | E-methanol |
Electrochaea/Biocat Roslev | Ryberg | 60.0 | 1.01 | 10 | 10.0 | 990 | Synthetic methane |
European Energy/Kasso PtX | Rodekro | 67.0 | 1.13 | 10 | 11.5 | 1,018 | E-methanol |
HyproDenmark/Everfuel† | Fredericia | 67.5 | 1.13 | 4.8 | 424 | TBC | |
- DEA | |||||||
* Calculations assume energy density of 120MJ/kg; †Project size and overall funding not disclosed by DEA, total support and subsidised H2 output are derived from overall tender budget and allocations to other projects |