Germany launches carbon CfD scheme
Government expects to budget more than €10bn for subsidy programme in response to US IRA
The German energy ministry has launched its carbon contracts for difference (CCfDs) scheme, aimed at supporting the decarbonisation of production from energy-intensive industries, and expects the first round to take place this year. Robert Habeck, Germany’s federal minister for economic affairs and climate action, has been keen to pitch CCfDs as a response to the US Inflation Reduction Act (IRA). He has also played up the potential to boost the nascent hydrogen industry, while remaining notably silent on the topic of carbon capture. The government is shortly expected to publish a separate carbon management strategy that is likely to include its thinking on the deployment of CCS. “Progr
Also in this section
25 March 2026
The Middle East energy shock has highlighted the value of France’s unique potential to deploy nuclear-powered electrolysers
18 March 2026
The second fossil-fuel price shock in four years can be a much-needed catalyst for investment in the sector
9 March 2026
Hydrogen has not stalled in the UK because the technology does not work. The problem is that the system around it does not yet move at the speed required
4 March 2026
Turmoil in Middle East reminds nascent clean hydrogen sector that its future prospects are dependent on global energy markets and geopolitics






