Brussels (Brussels Morning Newspaper) January 17, 2026 – The European Commission approved a €200 million German state aid scheme supporting production of renewable hydrogen and derivatives in Canada for the EU market. The measure facilitates imports via competitive bidding, targeting up to 300 MW electrolysis capacity. Germany notified the scheme in December 2025, unlocking matching Canadian funds for clean energy transition.
- Scheme Structure and Funding Mechanism
- European Commission Evaluation Criteria
- Expected Environmental and Climate Impacts
- Strategic Role in EU Hydrogen Imports
- Comparison of Recent Hydrogen Aid Approvals
- Previous German Hydrogen Schemes
- RFNBO Production Process in Canada
- EU State Aid Rules Application
- Industry and Government Reactions
- Implementation Timeline
- Alignment with EU Policy Frameworks
- Economic Modelling and Projections
- Monitoring and Enforcement Mechanisms
- Canada-EU Energy Cooperation Context
- Global RFNBO Market Development
The double auction system connects Canadian producers with EU buyers, filling price gaps with public support. Expected CO2 savings reach 2.47 million tonnes, aiding REPowerEU and industrial decarbonisation goals. Bidding concludes in 2027 under EU renewable hydrogen criteria.
The approval followed assessment under 2022 Climate, Energy and Environmental Aid Guidelines. Commission found the scheme necessary, appropriate, and with positive effects outweighing competition distortions.
Scheme Structure and Funding Mechanism
Germany’s €200 million supports renewable fuels of non-biological origin (RFNBOs) from renewable electricity and captured CO2. An equal €200 million from Canada doubles investment for electrolysis plants. Open, transparent bidding selects lowest-price sellers and highest-price buyers.
Producers must comply with EU delegated acts on RFNBO additionality, temporal and geographical correlation. Aid minimises via least distortive design, with no EU sales restrictions. Scheme draws from prior German hydrogen import approvals in 2021 and 2024.
German Embassy in Canada welcomed the decision on social media. German Embassy in Canada / @GerAmbCanada said in X post,
“Great news for theHydrogen Alliance: The European Commission has finally approved €200 million German State aid for Canadian-produced renewable hydrogen and its derivatives for the EU market. We are ready to move forward!”
Great news for the 🇨🇦 🇩🇪 Hydrogen Alliance: The European Commission has finally approved €200 million German State aid for Canadian-produced renewable hydrogen and its derivatives for the EU market.
We are ready to move forward!https://t.co/zVan4u84Sd— Tjorven Bellmann & Matthias Lüttenberg (@GerAmbCanada) January 15, 2026
European Commission Evaluation Criteria

Assessment under Article 107(3)(c) TFEU confirmed incentive effect, as private investment insufficient absent aid. Safeguards include minimum aid levels and double-dipping prevention across schemes. Public consultation closed January 10, 2026.
Executive Vice-President Teresa Ribera noted alignment with Clean Industrial Deal and EU Hydrogen Strategy. Scheme supports 42 percent renewable hydrogen in industry by 2030 per revised Renewable Energy Directive.
Official EU Competition account confirmed the approval. EU Competition / @EU_Competition said in X post,
“TheCommission approves €200 million GermanState aid for Canadian-producedrenewable hydrogenand its derivatives for EU market For more information”
The 🇪🇺 Commission approves €200 million German 🇩🇪State aid for Canadian-produced 🇨🇦 renewable hydrogen 🌱 and its derivatives for EU market
For more information👇
🔗https://t.co/rYg7hjYHSI pic.twitter.com/22pQFkFt10
— EU Competition (@EU_Competition) January 15, 2026
Expected Environmental and Climate Impacts
Germany projects 2.47 million tonnes CO2 equivalent avoided annually. Contribution meets national shares of EU targets under Effort Sharing Regulation. RFNBOs target steel, chemicals, and aviation decarbonisation.
Life-cycle emissions comply with EU Taxonomy. Independent verification required for additionality claims. Monitoring ensures sustained climate benefits post-2030.
Strategic Role in EU Hydrogen Imports
Initiative addresses EU’s 20 million tonne import ambition by 2030. Canada leverages renewables and CCS for RFNBOs, complementing green hydrogen from Iberia, North Africa. Germany leads bookings via H2Global and European Hydrogen Bank auctions.
Wilhelmshaven, Brunsbüttel terminals prepare ammonia import infrastructure. REPowerEU accelerates post-Russia gas cuts.
Comparison of Recent Hydrogen Aid Approvals
| Scheme | Country | Amount (€M) | Capacity | Start Year |
| Canada RFNBO | Germany | 200 | 300 MW | 2027 |
| US Hydrogen | Netherlands | 350 | 500,000 t | 2028 |
| Algerian Pipeline | Italy | 150 | 150,000 t | 2030 |
| Australian eFuels | France | 100 | 100,000 t | 2029 |
Previous German Hydrogen Schemes

December 2021 approval launched first non-EU imports. 2024 scheme expanded to Middle East partners. Current iteration refines double auction based on bidding experience. Cumulative aid supports 10 percent of 2030 targets.
Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs coordinates with BMWK Climate Fund. Private sector matches via offtake guarantees.
RFNBO Production Process in Canada
Electrolysers split water using wind/solar power. CO2 from direct air capture or industry combines via Fischer-Tropsch for e-fuels. Maritime shipping in ammonia form reduces conversion losses.
Canadian sites in British Columbia, Alberta selected for grid access. Provinces offer parallel incentives under Clean Fuel Regulations.
EU State Aid Rules Application
CEEAG 2022 enables climate aid up to permitted thresholds. Formal investigation verified funding gaps via third-party models. Non-confidential decision publishes under SA.118372.
Open tender mandates non-discrimination. Annual reporting tracks milestones, with clawback for non-compliance.
Industry and Government Reactions
RWE, Thyssenkrupp express interest in offtake. Economy Minister Robert Habeck links to industrial strategy. Verband der Chemischen Industrie welcomes feedstock security.
Canadian Natural Resources Minister Jonathan Wilkinson highlights bilateral Green Alliance.
Implementation Timeline
Bidding launches Q1 2027, awards by year-end. Construction 2028-2029. First deliveries 2030 align with industrial ramp-up. Commission reviews mid-term progress.
Beneficiaries submit compliance proofs pre-payment. EU-wide sales ensure market access.
Alignment with EU Policy Frameworks
Supports Renewable Energy Directive targets: 42.5 percent renewables by 2030. REPowerEU diversifies from 40 percent Russian gas pre-2022. Clean Industrial Deal benchmarks competitiveness.
Hy2Tech IPCEI complements domestic electrolysers. Critical Raw Materials Act secures platinum group inputs.
Economic Modelling and Projections
German analysis shows 1:4 public-private leverage. 500 construction jobs, 200 operations roles projected. Contribution to 6 GW import capacity goal.
IEA scenarios validate RFNBO bridge to full green hydrogen.
Monitoring and Enforcement Mechanisms
Annual audits by accredited verifiers. Digital tracking via Guarantees of Origin for RFNBOs. Breach triggers aid recovery plus interest.
Commission retains modification powers if market evolves.
Canada-EU Energy Cooperation Context
2025 Strategic Partnership on Energy includes hydrogen roadmap. CETA eliminates tariffs on electrolyser components. Joint CCS standards harmonised.
Germany-Canada Hydrogen Alliance formalised at 2024 G7.
Global RFNBO Market Development
80 million tonnes hydrogen demand forecast 2030. EU captures 20 percent via imports. Canada targets 6 million tonnes exports by 2050.
Australia, Chile follow with electrolyser incentives.