OMV,
the integrated, international oil, gas and chemicals company headquartered in
Vienna, and Kommunalkredit Austria AG (Kommunalkredit) have announced a joint
investment in the construction of Austria’s largest electrolysis plant in the
OMV Schwechat Refinery. Total investment will be around EUR 25 mn, with OMV and
Kommunalkredit each bearing half the cost. The plant is expected to go live in
the second half of 2023.
From this point, the 10 MW PEM (polymer electrolyte membrane) electrolysis will
produce up to 1,500 metric tons of green hydrogen a year. The green hydrogen
will be used to hydrogenate bio-based and fossil fuels, substituting grey
hydrogen in the refinery. This would reduce OMV’s carbon footprint by up to
15,000 metric tons of fossil CO2 annually, and enables by using green hydrogen
more than 17 million CO2 emission free bus or truck kilometers each year.
“By building Austria’s largest electrolysis plant in the OMV Schwechat
Refinery, we are making another contribution to reducing CO2 and to meeting
climate targets, whereby hydrogen is a key technology. We deliberately opted
for green hydrogen production on an industrial scale as we see the potential it
holds – for lower-carbon road use as well as for reducing CO2 emissions in
industrial operations”, said Thomas Gangl, OMV Chief Downstream Operations
Officer.
OMV laid out its ambitious climate targets back in July 2020. These include
reaching net-zero emissions in operations (Scope 1 and 2) by 2050 or sooner.
OMV will achieve net zero through energy-efficiency measures, new technologies
such as carbon capture and storage or carbon capture and utilization, hydrogen,
renewables (like the photovoltaic plant in Austria), and measures to optimize
the portfolio. The successful and economic feasible implementation of these
sustainable and innovative technologies will require an incentive system that
extends beyond Austrian and European legislation.
Promoting the EU’s Green Deal, the energy transition and sustainable
infrastructure and energy financing, Kommunalkredit is focused on advancing
innovative technologies in its Austrian home market to address major challenges
such as economic growth, job creation, and climate-protection measures.
“This project is a milestone in Austria’s industrial policy under the EU Green
Deal. We take our responsibility towards society seriously, to contribute to
measures that help to prevent climate change. As a member of the “European
Clean Hydrogen Alliance”, we are backing our words with actions, supporting the
construction of the electrolysis plant with green financing, and thereby making
an important contribution, together with OMV, to the United Nations’ SDGs”,
said Bernd Fislage, CEO of Kommunalkredit Austria AG.
The project is supported by the Austrian Climate and Energy Fund and is part of
the Hydrogen Initiative Energy Model Region Austria Power & Gas (WIVA
P&G).
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