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Main Authors: Saretta, Marco, Raheli, Enrica, Kazempour, Jalal
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.26451
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author Saretta, Marco
Raheli, Enrica
Kazempour, Jalal
author_facet Saretta, Marco
Raheli, Enrica
Kazempour, Jalal
contents Despite hydrogen being central to Europe's decarbonisation strategy, only a small share of renewable hydrogen projects reached final investment decision. A key barrier is uncertainty about how future hydrogen markets will be designed and operated, particularly under Renewable Fuels of Non-Biological Origin requirements. This study investigates the extent to which future hydrogen market design can be adapted from existing natural gas markets, and the challenges it must address. The analysis was based on a survey targeting European gas transmission system operators, structured around five components: market design principles, trading frameworks, capacity allocation, tariffs, and balancing. The survey produced two outputs: an assessment of mechanism transferability and an identification of challenges for early hydrogen market development. Core market design principles and trading frameworks are broadly transferable from natural gas markets, as entry-exit systems and virtual trading points. Capacity allocation requires targeted adaptation to improve coupling with electricity markets. Tariffs require adaptation through intertemporal cost allocation, distributing infrastructure costs over time to protect early adopters. Balancing regimes should be revisited to reflect hydrogen's physical characteristics and different linepack flexibility usages. Key challenges for early hydrogen markets include: temporal mismatches between variable renewable supply and expected relatively stable industrial demand, limited operational flexibility due to scarce storage and reduced pipeline linepack, fragmented regional hydrogen clusters, and regulatory uncertainty affecting long-term investment decisions. These findings provide empirical input to the hydrogen network code led by the European Network of Hydrogen Network Operators and offer guidance to policymakers designing hydrogen market frameworks.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2603_26451
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Towards European Hydrogen Market Design: Perspectives from Transmission System Operators
Saretta, Marco
Raheli, Enrica
Kazempour, Jalal
Optimization and Control
Despite hydrogen being central to Europe's decarbonisation strategy, only a small share of renewable hydrogen projects reached final investment decision. A key barrier is uncertainty about how future hydrogen markets will be designed and operated, particularly under Renewable Fuels of Non-Biological Origin requirements. This study investigates the extent to which future hydrogen market design can be adapted from existing natural gas markets, and the challenges it must address. The analysis was based on a survey targeting European gas transmission system operators, structured around five components: market design principles, trading frameworks, capacity allocation, tariffs, and balancing. The survey produced two outputs: an assessment of mechanism transferability and an identification of challenges for early hydrogen market development. Core market design principles and trading frameworks are broadly transferable from natural gas markets, as entry-exit systems and virtual trading points. Capacity allocation requires targeted adaptation to improve coupling with electricity markets. Tariffs require adaptation through intertemporal cost allocation, distributing infrastructure costs over time to protect early adopters. Balancing regimes should be revisited to reflect hydrogen's physical characteristics and different linepack flexibility usages. Key challenges for early hydrogen markets include: temporal mismatches between variable renewable supply and expected relatively stable industrial demand, limited operational flexibility due to scarce storage and reduced pipeline linepack, fragmented regional hydrogen clusters, and regulatory uncertainty affecting long-term investment decisions. These findings provide empirical input to the hydrogen network code led by the European Network of Hydrogen Network Operators and offer guidance to policymakers designing hydrogen market frameworks.
title Towards European Hydrogen Market Design: Perspectives from Transmission System Operators
topic Optimization and Control
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.26451