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AquaVentus and Hydrogen Scotland partner to advance North Sea Green Hydrogen Corridor

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AquaVentus, Germany’s offshore wind-to-hydrogen initiative, and Hydrogen Scotland signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to deepen cooperation on green hydrogen production, transport, and deployment across the North Sea region.

Green hydrogen—produced using renewable power and transported via dedicated pipelines—offers one of the few viable pathways to cut emissions in steel, chemicals, and other hard-to-abate sectors.

Both organisations emphasised that the collaboration is not only about technology, but also about aligning infrastructure, regulation, and investment to accelerate a European hydrogen market.

AquaVentus, supported by more than 100 companies, research institutes, and industry groups, has set one of the most ambitious targets in the sector: producing one million tones of green hydrogen annually from offshore wind by 2035. Achieving this would require installing 10 GW of electrolyser capacity in the North Sea, which will be connected to land via a new pipeline infrastructure.

Scotland enters the partnership with significant natural advantages. Offshore wind potential exceeds domestic demand, positioning the country as a prospective exporter of green hydrogen to continental Europe.

The move also reflects the geopolitical dimension of energy transition, with the EU targeting 10 million tones of domestic renewable hydrogen production by 2030 and additional imports of the same scale. Cross-border projects like this one address both security of supply and competitiveness.

Research and innovation form another pillar of the MoU. Both organisations intend to intensify joint R&D activities, particularly in scaling electrolysis technology, integrating offshore wind farms with hydrogen production, and standardising quality and safety requirements across the value chain. Aligning technical standards is seen as a prerequisite for creating a functioning internal hydrogen market.

Source: theelectricityhub

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