Marcial González de Armas
Electrical engineer in the sector
What only a few months ago was considered a meaningless project and discarded due to lack of consensus, has now become a reality. Many will think that this has been due to a substantial change in the project, but nothing could be further from the truth. It has simply been a change of name and image that has led to the flourishing of an agreement between Spain-France and Europe to build a gas bridge between the peninsula and the rest of Europe.
A project that was originally envisaged as a gas pipeline through which hydrogen would circulate in the future, is now a hydroproduct (a hydrogen pipeline) through which gas will circulate in its first years of life. This pipeline has been approved as a matter of urgency to solve the gas crisis in Europe. It is a pity that its construction is expected to be completed in 5 years, when the European energy panorama will be very different.
Moreover, the project is not accompanied by strong plans to integrate hydrogen into the European energy landscape. For now, it is just an anecdote that we have not yet seen implemented on a large scale, which leads me even more to believe that it will take longer than we think to see green hydrogen circulating in this hydrogen product.
The reality is clear: Europe needs gas and has seen the need to paint as green a project that a few months ago was pushed aside for not being in line with the EU's ecological transition objectives.
To finish by highlighting the positive, this designation means that hydrogen technology must be promoted and the pipeline must be built in such a way that it is ready to transport hydrogen from the outset. Furthermore, increasing the energy interconnection of the Iberian peninsula with the rest of Europe is a step that benefits us all. Too bad that this is at the cost of investing in infrastructures that, at least in the short and medium term future, will serve to continue consuming fossil fuels.