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RWE signs new supply agreement for natural gas with Equinor

30/10/2023

Agreement signed for 5 years starting in October this year with volumes of between 10 to 15 TWh per year

RWE and Equinor have signed a new supply contract for between 10 and 15 terawatt hours (TWh) of natural gas per year from now until 2028. This new bilateral agreement builds upon the long-standing relationship between RWE and Equinor. The contract is priced at market terms and the gas will be delivered to Germany’s virtual trading hub THE (Trading Hub Europe).

Andree Stracke, CEO of RWE Supply & Trading: 
“We are delighted to have signed a long-term gas supply agreement with our partner Equinor. For us as a global energy trader, gas plays an important role in the energy transition. The newly concluded gas supply agreement adds a further important building block to our pan-European natural gas portfolio, which contributes to ensuring security of supply.”

“Germany and Norway have been energy partners ever since Norwegian gas exports first started more than 45 years ago. I am very pleased that we are continuing to develop this partnership and that we can announce another bilateral agreement between Equinor and RWE, which is one of many companies that see Norwegian gas as an enabler of energy security as well as of the energy transition,” says Equinor’s Senior Vice President Gas & Power Helge Haugane.

Earlier this year RWE and Equinor announced their plan to develop large-scale value chains to ensure security of supply and reduce emissions in response to the German-Norwegian Partnership on Climate, Renewable Energy and Green Industry.

The first step is to invest in and develop new gas-fired power plants in Germany that are ready to use hydrogen as a feedstock as soon as it is available on an industrial scale in the country. These plants are also subject to the power plant strategy announced by the German government, which aims to create a suitable regulatory framework for new gas-fired power plants.

Key elements in the value chain will be the production of low-carbon hydrogen in Norway and its transport to Germany, which could help accelerate the development of a hydrogen economy. Gradually, green hydrogen will also be produced using power from wind farms along the pipeline route.

KeyFacts Energy: RWE Renewables Germany country profile  

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