Last year, the Federal Association of the German Glass Industry (BV Glas) presented their carbon roadmap towards climate neutrality and commissioned the Institute of Energy Economics and Rational Energy Use (IER) at the University of Stuttgart to calculate a total of three scenarios to this end.Whether with hydrogen, biological gas or electricity from renewable sources, the key to climate neutrality is to replace natural gas in the long-term, as it currently makes up 77 percent of the energy mix. To do this, conventional melting vats would have to be replaced by fully electrical or hybrid technologies. However, these are not yet market-ready, so much research and development is still needed in the coming years. For the first time, the costs for transforming the glass industry have been calculated along with the roadmap: the industry would have to invest approx. EUR 4.5 billion to refit the sector with climate-neutral melting vats.
There are currently various projects underway for this purpose. “NextGen Furnace”, a project by glass manufacturer Ardagh, receives financial support both from the Federal Ministry of Economic Affairs and Climate Action (BMWK) and from the Competence Centre on Climate Change Mitigation in Energy-Intensive Industries (KEI). Over the course of the year, the plan is to
construct a melting vat which is heated mostly through electricity at the Ardagh site in Obernkirchen. In future, 80 percent of the electricity is to be generated from renewable energies, and the remaining 20 percent of energy needed supplied by a conventional oxygen and natural gas firing system. The plan is to thus reduce carbon emissions by 60 percent, and also by using a
large percentage of glass shards in production. The plant is intended to be a reference technology for the entire glass container industry in future.
At the beginning of 2023, the project H2Glass was also launched, which is supported by European funds from the EU funding programme for research and innovation Horizon Europe. The international project with 23 glass industry partners, which is planned to last four years, is coordinated by the Norwegian company Sintef, and focuses on promoting hydrogen technologies and intelligent production systems for decarbonising the glass sector.
Not all projects are successful. The European joint project “Furnace for the Future” for climate-neutral glass production did not receive any support from the ETS innovation fund of the European Union, one of the world’s largest programmes for financial aid to promote and demonstrate innovative carbon-reduced technologies. The 19 participating companies had also planned to construct a hybrid electric melting vat which would be able to produce glass of any colour and which would use a large proportion of recycled glass. The new technology was supposed to make it possible to operate electric melting vats with a capacity of more than 300 tonnes per day. Without the EU grant, the project cannot continue as originally planned.