Germany

Germany

Provides State aid to support industrial decarbonization

24 Mar 2025

On 24 March 2025, the European Commission approved a €5 billion State aid scheme from Germany to support industrial decarbonisation, advancing the transition to a net-zero economy. Open to companies in sectors subject to the European Union Emissions Trading Scheme, such as the chemical, plaster and glass sectors, the scheme operates under a competitive bidding process with 15-year Climate Protection Contracts. Projects may propose emissions reductions through measures such as electrification, hydrogen, carbon capture and storage, carbon capture and use, and energy efficiency. Beneficiaries are selected on the basis of the lowest aid amount requested per tonne of avoided carbon dioxide emissions and must achieve a 60 per cent reduction within three years and a 90 per cent reduction by the end of the project. The aid will take the form of grants based on the beneficiaries’ bids, market prices and the additional costs of the carbon dioxide-reducing production process compared with conventional alternatives. If the production process becomes cheaper as a result of the scheme, beneficiaries must repay the difference to Germany. The European Commission states that the scheme has an incentive effect, as investments in decarbonising technologies would not be made without public support.

Nature of measure:
  • Incentives
Type:
  • Promotion and facilitation (Investment incentives)
Industry:
  • Manufacturing (Manufacture of chemicals and chemical products, Manufacture of rubber and plastics products, and other non-metallic mineral products, Other manufacturing)
Inward FDI:
Yes
Outward FDI:
No
Sources: