Germany: Act to enable commercial CCS and CCU now in force
16 december 2025
Germany: Act to enable commercial CCS and CCU now in force16 december 2025 On 28 November 2025, a bill amending the German Carbon Dioxide Storage Act (Kohlendioxid-Speicherungsgesetz – KSpG) and renaming it the Carbon Dioxide Storage and Transport Act (Kohlendioxid-Speicherung-und-Transport-Gesetz – KSpTG (available here)) entered into force and became law. The KSpTG allows for carbon capture and storage (CCS) as well as carbon capture and utilization (CCU) for nearly all purposes and introduces a permitting and operational framework for a CO₂ pipeline infrastructure. What do I need to know?The adopted version of the KSpTG largely reflects the initial draft law presented by the Federal Government (cf. our summary: Germany: Federal government presents draft bill to accelerate the transition to climate-neutral heat supply | Eversheds Sutherland). The key aspects of the Act include the following:
Why is this important for stakeholders?The German roadmap on CCS and CCU is taking shape. For CO₂ emitters falling under the EU ETS, the KSpTG provides an option to decarbonize via the use of CCS or CCU and reduce the number of CO₂ certificates they would otherwise be required to deliver. In this context, support schemes are likely to be of particular interest to many emitters because, given the current market price of CO₂ certificates and the transport and storage price per ton of CO₂, CCS may only be financially viable with the support of funding at the current stage. Furthermore, there are doubts as to whether the German EEZ and continental shelf are capable of storing significant amounts of CO₂ and whether CCS infrastructure might conflict with offshore wind energy infrastructure, which takes precedence over CO₂ storage. Therefore, the export of CO₂ may become crucial. What should I do next?Emitters, namely in the cement, chemical, limestone, steel and waste incineration industries, should consider whether CCS is a viable option to reduce their CO₂ emissions. In this context, it should be noted that two national funding schemes are planned that include support for projects using CCS or CCUS. These are the climate protection contracts (Klimaschutzverträge), which are construed as Carbon Contracts for Difference (CCfDs), and the Federal Funding Industry and Climate Protection program (Förderrichtlinie Bundesförderung Industrie und Klimaschutz – BIK). These schemes may be relevant not only to emitters but also to companies transporting and storing CO₂, as those emitters constitute potential customers. In addition, several provisions under the current KSpTG empower Federal Ministries to enact ordinances. Such ordinances will specify, for example, the requirements for CO₂ storage and the obligations of certain oil and gas exploration companies under Art. 23 of the Regulation (EU) 2024/1735 (Net-Zero Industry Act -NZIA). No such ordinances have been issued to date, but affected players should closely monitor these developments. Belangrijkste contactpersonen
Laatste inzichten
Laatste nieuws
Laatste evenementen en trainingen
nieuws over cliënten 02 juni 2026 Next stop, public ownership: Eversheds Sutherland advises DfT on GTR transi... nieuws over kantoor 01 juni 2026 Eversheds Sutherland strengthens restructuring offering with senior partner... nieuws over kantoor 01 juni 2026 Eversheds Sutherland strengthens Commercial Advisory practice with technolo... nieuws over cliënten 28 mei 2026 Eversheds Sutherland advises Schroders Greencoat on acquisition of Dutch bi... virtual Spanish employment law training 02 juni 2026 2pm - 5pm (BST) Virtual virtual UK employment law training 09 juni 2026 1pm - 4pm (BST) Virtual virtual Nordic (Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden) employment law training 16 juni 2026 12.45pm - 4pm (BST) Virtual virtual Introduction to Swiss employment law 23 juni 2026 2pm - 5pm (GMT) Virtual |