Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
European Energy Markets
17APR

Berlin confirms 12 GW gas tender

3 min read
12:44UTC

German Economy Minister Katherina Reiche confirmed the 12 GW hydrogen-ready gas-plant tender programme is formally agreed with the European Commission, with first units operational by 2031 and a 20 GW coalition target by 2030.

EconomicDeveloping
Key takeaway

Reiche's confirmation puts a floor under German gas demand through the early 2030s, closing a three-year coalition fight.

New German Economy Minister Katherina Reiche confirmed that the 12 GW hydrogen-ready gas-plant tender programme is formally agreed with the European Commission. First tenders open in 2026, with additional rounds in 2027 and 2029/2030; all units must be operational by 2031, hydrogen-ready and decarbonised by 2045. A capacity market for supply security from 2032 is targeted for delivery in 2027. The coalition target is up to 20 GW of gas-fired capacity by 2030.

The political resolution matters more than the megawatt count. The September 2026 first-auction date set under the prior coalition had been blocked at substance level by SPD environment-ministry objections that delayed the draft law for three years. Reiche's confirmation closes that fight: Berlin is committed to forward gas-plant build regardless of how the SPD environment portfolio frames its renewables conditions. The 2027 capacity-market delivery target creates an investment-decision hurdle ahead of the build-out, with the binding constraint being whether auction-clearing prices exceed merchant CCGT spreads at 2031 vintage. The forward gas-demand curve through the early 2030s now has a German floor under it, structurally linked to the LNG supply architecture the Kunpeng case is testing in public.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Germany has agreed with Brussels to build 12 gigawatts of new gas-fired power plants that can later be converted to run on hydrogen, a cleaner fuel. The first contracts go out to tender this year and all the plants must be running by 2031. Germany needs these plants to keep the lights on after closing its nuclear stations and while its wind and solar capacity cannot yet cover all demand on calm or cloudy days.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Germany's 2022-23 simultaneous nuclear exit and accelerated coal retirement removed approximately 25 GW of firm dispatchable capacity without a replacement mechanism, creating a structural gap that the renewables build-out cannot close on its own because of intermittency.

The SPD environment ministry's three-year objection to the gas-plant draft law was rooted in the ministry's interpretation that new gas plant build extended fossil fuel lock-in beyond the 2045 climate target, a dispute only resolved by the hydrogen-ready specification that gives plants a defined decarbonisation pathway.

EU state aid rules required Commission notification and approval for the capacity market, adding an external regulatory timeline that the German government could not accelerate unilaterally, which is why the September 2026 auction target in the original draft slipped.

What could happen next?
  • Meaning

    Siemens Energy and GE Vernova are the two primary turbine suppliers with H2-ready CCGT units in commercial delivery; the 12-20 GW programme represents a multi-billion euro order book concentrated in two manufacturers.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Meaning

    The forward gas demand floor through 2031 provides a structural backstop for EU LNG import capacity investment, as European terminal operators can underwrite new regasification capacity against visible German gas demand.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Meaning

    SPD's acceptance of the gas-plant programme at coalition level represents a structural defeat for the German environment ministry's position that new firm capacity should come exclusively from storage and demand response, with implications for the ministry's credibility in future coalition negotiations.

    Short term · Assessed
First Reported In

Update #10 · TTF breaks EUR 50; US LNG hits 58% of imports

Clean Energy Wire· 18 May 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
Berlin confirms 12 GW gas tender
The political resolution closes three years of SPD environment-ministry obstruction. The forward German gas-demand curve through the early 2030s now has a floor under it.
Different Perspectives
Amsterdam-Rotterdam-Antwerp gas trading desks
Amsterdam-Rotterdam-Antwerp gas trading desks
TTF failing to sustain EUR 47-plus with 51 mcm/day of Norwegian supply offline confirms EUR 50 as a diplomatic ceiling rather than a physical floor; the curve is priced as a Troll-restart long, not a storage-deficit short. Winter Cal-26 long versus summer TTF short is the structural position FNB Gas's broken-mechanism verdict supports.
European Commission and DG Energy
European Commission and DG Energy
The Commission lowered the mandatory fill target from 90% to 80% and published the 11 May ETS benchmark revision saving industry EUR 4 billion, choosing industrial competitiveness over storage ambition at the moment physical injection margins narrowed. Berlin's confirmation of no summer injection scheme came with no Commission counter-instrument.
Hungarian and Slovak industrial offtakers
Hungarian and Slovak industrial offtakers
Hungary and Slovakia pay a EUR 2-plus delivered-gas premium over TTF benchmark prices regardless of ACER's improved pipeline-congestion reading, and both are litigating the 17 June EU pipeline ban at the CJEU (ID:3229). A post-17 June tightening of TurkStream supply would widen that basis further.
EBN and Dutch state
EBN and Dutch state
The Dutch state trebled EBN's mandate from 25 to 80 TWh, leaving EBN the sole active Dutch injector after the January auctions drew zero commercial bookings (ID:3637). The EUR 233m state budget cap is the binding cost ceiling; above-market injection at EBN is a fiscal transfer, not a market outcome.
CRE and French gas operators
CRE and French gas operators
France's 100% mandatory CRE booking order is carrying French injection regardless of the inverted strip, providing EU aggregate cover that Germany's abolished levy cannot supply. The order renews annually on CRE decision, making it a political risk rather than a structural guarantee.
FNB Gas and German TSOs
FNB Gas and German TSOs
FNB Gas formally declared the market-based storage-refill framework broken on 27 May, citing zero-clearing January auctions, ten days after Berlin ruled out any summer injection scheme. The intervention sets the institutional predicate for reintroducing a storage levy; the Gasspeicherumlage precedent (2022-25) confirms the administrative path is open.