Renewables

Turkey to blend green hydrogen into natural gas supply network for heating

Turkey blend green hydrogen natural gas heating

Photo: Pixabay

Published

July 27, 2020

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

July 27, 2020

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

GAZBİR tested a 20% share of hydrogen in natural gas and measured an increase in energy efficiency and lower carbon emissions, so Turkey is looking to introduce the fuel produced by using renewable sources in heating.

Turkish energy companies started a project supported by the Energy Market Regulatory Authority (EMRA) to reduce the country’s dependence on imported natural gas and increase energy efficiency. The aim is to replace 6% of the fossil fuel in the distribution system in Turkey with hydrogen produced from renewable sources by the end of next year, Anadolu Agency reported.

Promising results from studies

The research and development activities will be conducted in a testing center in Konya and equipment has been selected. The Natural Gas Distribution Companies Association in Turkey (GAZBİR) completed the preliminary studies and the environmental impact assessment there.

Engineers will be measuring the effect and calibrating the mix. Simulations showed an increase in energy efficiency and lower carbon emissions.

The companies are examining ways to make the switch without the need for any significant upgrade in consumer devices

The R&D facility in southwestern Anatolia will design necessary devices. The basic share of hydrogen in the study for heating purposes in Turkey is 20%. The companies are examining ways to make the switch without the need for any significant upgrade in consumer devices.

Power output from renewable sources is largely unpredictable due to changing weather conditions. Using surplus electricity for electrolysis to obtain hydrogen from water is a way to store energy.

Applications in automotive, industrial sectors

The government earlier revealed it would assess the technology’s potential in the project for the first domestic electric car, under development by Automobile Joint Venture Group (TOGG).

State officials in Turkey have said hydrogen is part of a long-term strategy for energy security, especially for heating and in the industrial sector. The efforts include powering the production of the new fuel from local coal. If carbon dioxide is captured and stored in the process, the hydrogen is marked as blue, while otherwise it is colloquially called gray hydrogen.

As for heating, Turkey is currently leaning on its vast geothermal potential for the sector’s decarbonization.

Comments (0)

Be the first one to comment on this article.

Enter Your Comment
Please wait... Please fill in the required fields. There seems to be an error, please refresh the page and try again. Your comment has been sent.

Related Articles

Serbia taxes greenhouse gas emissions imported carbon intensive products

Serbia rolls out taxes on greenhouse gas emissions, imported carbon-intensive products

03 December 2025 - The new laws on taxes on greenhouse gas emissions and carbon-intensive product imports, both at EUR 4 per ton of CO2 equivalent, are coming into effect on January 1

GGF ushers in new wave energy transition Western Balkans nine deals

GGF ushers in new wave of energy transition investments in Western Balkans with eight deals

01 December 2025 - The Green for Growth Fund has signed a series of agreements on green lending and energy projects throughout the Western Balkans

Just Transition Forum unites regional leaders to tackle energy poverty shape fair energy future

Just Transition Forum unites regional leaders to tackle energy poverty, shape fair energy future

27 November 2025 - Governments, partners, civil society and community leaders from across Europe gathered in Tbilisi at the Energy Community’s Just Transition Forum

croatia social climate policy plan EU ets 2 marija vuckovic

Croatia drafts EUR 1.68 billion Social Climate Plan

25 November 2025 - The funds would be obtained from the auctions of emission allowances in the European Union and Croatia under the EU ETS 2