Jointly owned power plant in Lippendorf: EnBW sells its shares to co-owner EP Energy Transition
Karlsruhe. EnBW Energie Baden-Württemberg AG (EnBW) and EP Energy Transition (part of the EP Group) have successfully agreed on the sale of the shares in Lippendorf brown coal power plant. Upon signing the agreement, EP Energy Transition will acquire EnBW’s shares upon expiry of 31 December 2025. Both parties have agreed to keep the details of the deal confidential. The transaction is subject to approval by the antitrust authority and other customary completion terms.
Lausitz Energie Kraftwerke AG (LEAG), a subsidiary of EP Energy Transition, already holds a 50 percent stake in Lippendorf power plant. EnBW has equally held 50 percent of the shares until now.
“With this sale, we are continuing to decarbonize our generation portfolio and reducing carbon emissions by up to two and a half million metric tons per year,” said Peter Heydecker, EnBW Board Member for Sustainable Generation Infrastructure. “As of today, this will increase the share of our overall generation capacity covered by renewable energy to around 64 percent,” continued Heydecker, before going on to say that since EP Energy Transition and its subsidiary LEAG are already fully involved in the site, the company is the ideal partner for the acquisition.
Lippendorf power plant has been in operation since 1999 and has two power plant blocks (R and S), each with a net electrical output of 875 megawatts (MWel). It achieves a plant load factor of around 46 percent, making it one of the most efficient brown coal power plants in Europe. Block R is owned by LEAG, which operates both power plant blocks with its on-site staff, while Block S is owned by EnBW. Each company holds a 50 percent stake in the facilities. With the sale of its only brown coal power plant, EnBW will no longer use brown coal upon expiry of 31 December 2025, cutting the company’s coal-based power generation capacity to 2,260 MWel. By the end of 2025, EnBW will have reduced its coal-fired generation capacity by around 40 percent within the space of two years.
H2-ready gas power plants guarantee security of supply
EnBW has set itself an ambitious target of phasing out coal by 2028, provided that the progress of the energy transition allows this and security of supply is not compromised.
In April, the first of currently three so-called fuel switches took place at the Stuttgart-Münster power plant site, with new, highly efficient gas turbine power plants replacing the existing coal-fired plants. Natural gas serves as a bridging technology on the path to achieving climate neutrality. Fuel switch power plants are also being built at the Heilbronn and Altbach/Deizisau sites. The new facilities are all “H₂-ready.” Once commissioned, the hard coal blocks at the sites will be taken out of service. In the 2030s, another fuel switch is set to initially use “blue” and eventually “green” hydrogen (H₂) for the climate-friendly generation of electricity and district heating.
The new hydrogen-ready gas power plants are highly flexible and can quickly compensate for grid congestion. In an energy system that is increasingly reliant on volatile renewable energy sources, available power – that is to say, flexible, controllable power – is indispensable for guaranteeing security of supply at all times.
About EnBW Energie Baden-Württemberg AG
With a workforce of around 30,000 employees, EnBW is one of the largest energy supply companies in Germany and Europe. It supplies energy to around 5.5 million customers and is active across all stages of the value chain, from generation and trading to grid operation and the sale of electricity, heating and gas. In the course of the company’s transformation from a traditional energy provider to a sustainable infrastructure group, the expansion of renewable energy sources and of the distribution and transportation grids for electricity, gas and hydrogen are cornerstones of EnBW’s growth strategy and the focus of its investment spending. By 2030, EnBW plans gross investments of over 40 billion euros, around 90 percent of which is earmarked for Germany. Renewables are set to account for around 80 percent of EnBW’s generation portfolio by then. The aim is to phase out coal by the end of 2028. These are key milestones on the company’s way to achieving climate neutrality by 2035. www.enbw.com