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German utilities to bid for brand-new power station capability

Germany's government has revealed it will tender for 10 gigawatts (GW) of brand-new gasfired power station capability that need to be ready to change to tidy hydrogen in the future transition away from polluting fossil fuels.

Utilities have responded by saying they will bid for aids that Berlin has actually committed to pay since the plants will match volatile renewables till such time that electricity can be 100% green.

They will need financial backing since they will only run when weather-driven renewable supply fails - not enough to recoup their financial investment costs.

Here are public statements from companies pertaining to their involvement and position on the scheme.

IQONY

The offshoot of coal-to-power group Steag prepares to construct hydrogen-ready gas-fired plants at Bergkamen, Bexbach and Querschied-Weiher, depending upon conditions attached to the federal government tenders.

It also argued in a March 28 news release that Berlin should act soon as Iqnoy can not keep running coal plants at those sites permanently.

These are classed as system-relevant, but the compensation used by the state for that status is just sufficient to cover costs and unprofitable from a market point of view, it stated.

Uniper

Chief Executive Michael Lewis informed a Feb. 28 revenues call with experts that he saw substantial capacity in the plan, calling for it to be rapidly detailed and put into action.

If the federal government's structure, Uniper might begin with 1-2 GW conditions were acceptable, he told .

He likewise stated that 10 GW was inadequate to motivate an early departure from coal, putting the requirement for that to happen at 20-25 GW of brand-new capability.

EnBW

Regional utility EnBW is a most likely bidder at sites in the south-west, President Andreas Schell informed in January.

After a surprise replacement last month of Schell with Georg Stamatelopoulos at the helm, the new leader last month validated the company's interest, but added the legislation requirements fleshing out.

LEAG

German coal miner LEAG, which operates in the east of the nation and is owned by Czech energy group EPH, plans gas-fired power stations at 4 areas with combined capacity of at least 3 GW.

RWE

The western-focused mining and generation business has said it might construct 3 GW within the organized government tenders. It recently closed down another 5 coal plants.

CEO Markus Krebber at recent incomes calls cautioned that while RWE is keen, Berlin's strategy is still light on detail.

Statkraft

The German arm of Norwegian power utility Statkraft stated it would study the government's strategy however would focus mainly on transforming its existing gas-fired plants to hydrogen under ongoing internal business schemes.

KMW

Rhine-Main area generator Kraftwerke Mainz-Wiesbaden said on March 4 that it wishes to construct a hydrogen-ready gas plant for 250 MW power and 100 MW district heat capability at the website of an existing gas engine plant.

Supplied the federal government strategy is a suitable for its plan, the new system's commissioning might happen in 2028, the municipally-held company said.