Polish state energy giant Orlen has opened its first publicly available hydrogen refuelling station. The facility – the first of 100 Orlen plans to open in Poland and neighbouring countries until 2030 – is part of the firm’s efforts to move away from its traditional focus on oil and towards greener forms of energy.
The station – located in the city of Poznan – has already been providing fuel to the city’s fleet of 25 hydrogen buses since 2022 as part of the Clean Cities programme, co-financed by EU funds. On June 27, it opened to public use for hydrogen-powered passenger cars, trucks and buses.
“Hydrogen is a safe, alternative source of energy in transport that reduces carbon dioxide emissions in cities,” said Artur Osuchowski, a member of Orlen’s management board with oversight of energy transformation.
Such vehicles hold a store of hydrogen gas (H2), which, along with dioxygen (O2) from the surrounding air, is supplied to a fuel cell. An electrochemical reaction between them produces electricity to power the vehicle and produces only water vapour (H2O) and warm air as emissions.
In 2022, Orlen announced plans to create nine “hydrogen hubs” in Poland, the Czech Republic and Slovakia that would produce and distribute the fuel.
Later this year, it plans to open another hydrogen fuelling station in the Polish city of Katowice. Others will then follow in Warsaw, Krakow, Gdynia and Bielsko-Biala, among others.
For the current phase of the project, in which 16 stations are planned to be opened, Orlen received EUR 62 million in EU funding in April.
At the new facility in Poznan, the refuelling time for a passenger car with a 5 kg hydrogen tank is expected to take approximately 5 minutes. Such a supply of fuel is expected to be sufficient to travel approximately 600 km. The Orlen station will also allow up to 34 buses to be refuelled per day.
“Over the course of the 15-year contract, we will supply 1.8 million kilograms of hydrogen to Poznan buses, avoiding 21,000 tons of CO2 emissions,” said Osuchowski.
“In line with our strategy, we will build more than 100 hydrogen refuelling stations until 2030, half of which will be located in Poland,” he added.
The remaining half of Orlen’s hydrogen filling stations for individual, public and cargo transport by road and rail will be built in the Czech Republic and Slovakia.
Hydrogen will be supplied to them through a European network of hydrogen hubs, powered by renewable energy sources, and installations converting municipal waste into zero- and low-emission hydrogen.
“We will build 10 hydrogen hubs by the end of the decade. Installations of this type are already in operation today in Trzebinia, Wloclawek in Poland and the Czech Republic’s Litvinov,” explained Osuchowski.
As well as its move into hydrogen, Orlen has in recent years also expanded its gas holdings as well as launching plans to build so-called small modular reactors (SMRs) that will provide nuclear power.
Poland’s first publicly available hydrogen fuelling station was opened in Warsaw last year by Ze Pak, a private energy firm owned by Zygmunt Solorz-Zak, one of the country’s richest men. (Notes from Poland)