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Sunfire secures EUR 60 million in Federal funding for H2Giga

Germany-headed Sunfire GmbH, a global leader in the production of industrial electrolyzers based on alkaline and solid oxide technologies, has announced that the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) is providing a grant of EUR 60 million for the lead project H2Giga.

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The German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) is providing a grant of EUR 60 million to Sunfire GmbH for the H2Giga electrolyzers industrialization project.

Thanks to its enormous potential for decarbonizing energy-intensive industries, green hydrogen has evolved from a contentious “new hope” to a fixed building block of the energy transition. Demand is rocketing for electrolyzers, which split water into hydrogen using renewable electricity.

According to current plans, installed capacity electrolyzer in the EU alone is set to rise from the current 0.2 GW to 40 GW by 2030. Electrolysis companies need to rapidly expand their manufacturing capacities to meet the fast-growing demand for green hydrogen production.

H2Giga to speed up industrial manufacturing rollout

Sunfire – one of the world’s leading developers and producers of electrolyzers – is therefore rapidly expanding its manufacturing capacities. Together with partners from research and industry, Sunfire is preparing its technologies – alkaline and high-temperature electrolyzers (SOEC) – for industrial production at a gigawatt (GW) scale.

To this end, BMBF is providing a grand total of EUR 60 million in support for the lead project H2Giga.

The funding commitment will accelerate the time-to-market of innovative SOEC. Under the leadership of Sunfire, 15 associated partners will be receiving EUR 33 million to establish manufacturing processes and optimize systems.

By using off-heat from industrial processes, Sunfire’s SOEC electrolyzers require up to 30 percent less electricity from renewable energy sources than other technologies to produce a kilogram of hydrogen.

The new generation of our SOEC technology will be even more powerful and durable than today. We will redesign individual components to last longer and we will simplify the design of the systems. With our optimized high-temperature electrolyzers, our industrial customers will be able to produce green hydrogen more efficiently – and therefore more cost-effectively. To further reduce the price of our product, we will be developing process chains for industrial series production, said Christian von Olshausen, CTO of Sunfire.

Sunfire is embarking on the challenging path to gigawatt-scale production together with several partners the company has already been working with on various projects in the past. For example, the company will be drawing on the expertise of XENON Automatisierungstechnik GmbH to help set up a pilot line for automated production.

Both companies are already collaborating in making SOEC electrolyzers for Neste’s biorefinery in Rotterdam, the Netherlands.

We are really happy to cooperate with partners like XENON. They offer invaluable experience in the field of industrial manufacturing and are open to contributing this expertise to help drive the development of new technologies, explained Christian von Olshausen.

BMBF is also providing funding for the industrialization of pressurized alkaline electrolyzers. Although these robust systems have already proved themselves for decades in industrial hydrogen projects, they have not yet been manufactured in series production.

Sunfire and its eight associated partners have been granted total funding of EUR 27 million to transform the production of this technology to GW scale.

We will be establishing manufacturing processes and finalizing the new design of our pressurized alkaline electrolyzers. In comparison to the predecessor models, these will be yet another step forward in terms of energy consumption and longevity. This will give a further boost to the process of alkaline electrolysis – which is already well established as the most cost-effective electrolysis technology currently available, explained Christian von Olshausen.

Funded under “Wasserstoffrepublik Deutschland” program

The commitment from the German Government under the program “Wasserstoffrepublik Deutschland” (The Hydrogen Republic of Germany) is designed to accelerate the development and expansion of technologies to enable energy-intensive industries to produce and use green hydrogen fast and at scale.

In the lead project H2Giga, around 30 independent alliances are now working on transforming electrolysis technologies to the gigawatt scale. In addition to the public funding, Sunfire will also be investing significant amounts of its own funds in the industrialization process.

Partners SOEC:

ConverterTec Deutschland GmbH; DBI Gas -und Umwelttechnik GmbH; DECHEMA-Forschungsinstitut; Deutsches Zentrum für Luft und Raumfahrt e.V. (Institut für Technische Thermodynamik); Europäisches Institut für Energieforschung EIfER; Fraunhofer-Institut für Keramische Technologien und Systeme IKTS; HORIBA FuelCon GmbH; imk automotive GmbH; Karlsruher Institut für Technologie (Institut für Angewandte Materialien; Laboratorium für Elektronenmikroskopie); KERAFOL Keramische Folien GmbH & Co. KG; Kontron AIS GmbH; Sunfire GmbH (Coordinator); TU Bergakademie Freiberg (Technische Mechanik – Festkörpermechanik); Universität Bayreuth (Lehrstuhl Keramische Werkstoffe); and XENON Automatisierungstechnik GmbH.

Partners Alkaline Electrolysis:

Alantum Europe GmbH; Deutsches Zentrum für Luft und Raumfahrt e.V. (Institut für technische Thermodynamik); HAFF-Dichtungen GmbH; imk automotive GmbH; Fraunhofer-Institut für Fertigungstechnik und Angewandte Materialforschung IFAM; Fraunhofer-Institut für Fabrikbetrieb und -automatisierung IFF; Frenzelit GmbH; MTV NT GmbH; and Sunfire GmbH (Coordinator).

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