Kallista Energy and Lhyfe sign wind power sales agreement

Renewable energy producer Kallista Energy has signed a long-term wind power sales contract with Lhyfe, a pioneer in the production of green, renewable hydrogen. This partnership will promote Lhyfe's growth and the decarbonization of industry and mobility.
Lhyfe Projet

Partagez:

Kallista Energy and Lhyfe signwind power sales agreement. The latter is one of the world leaders in the production of green, renewable hydrogen. Their long-term contract supports Lhyfe’s growth and the decarbonization of industry and mobility.

Green Energy and Repowering

The Brachy wind farm has been equipped with 5 wind turbines for almost 17 years. It is located in the commune of Brachy in Seine-Maritime. Kallista Energy, owner and operator of the wind farm, will replace these turbines with state-of-the-art machines. With the same number of turbines, the new wind farm will be able to produce 70% more electricity than the old one. The financing of this renewal was made possible by the long-term power sales contract (cPPA). Kallista Energy and Lhyfe have signed a 15-year agreement. The refurbished Brachy wind farm will be home to 5 Vestas V126 wind turbines, with a total output of 15 MW. Scheduled for commissioning in summer 2024, it will generate 46 GWh of renewable electricity annually. All this production will be dedicated to Lhyfe’s green and renewable hydrogen production sites.

Renewable Energy Supply Strategy

Lhyfe has established a renewable electricity supply strategy to support its future green hydrogen production sites. With units already in service in the Pays de la Loire region and two new units in Brittany and Occitania, Lhyfe is aiming for a maximum total production capacity of 4 tonnes of green, renewable hydrogen per day. This cPPA contract enables Lhyfe to guarantee a long-term supply of green electricity. It also ensures competitive sales conditions for renewable hydrogen.

The Complementarity of Renewable Energies and Green Hydrogen

Frédéric Roche, President of Kallista Energy, explains: “The complementarity of renewable energies and green hydrogen is doubly virtuous: wind energy, transformed into hydrogen, enables the rapid decarbonization of industries that cannot use electricity directly, and hydrogen erases the variability of wind energy thanks to the flexibility of electrolyzers. We are proud to conclude this cPPA with Lhyfe as part of the renewal of one of our wind farms, while significantly increasing electricity production on the same site without increasing the number of wind turbines.”

Matthieu Guesné, Chairman, CEO and Founder of Lhyfe, adds: “This agreement with Kallista Energy strengthens our network of green energy supply partners, and gives us an additional 46 GWh per year to power our next production sites. It’s thanks to the trust of players like Kallista Energy that the green and renewable hydrogen sector is gaining momentum, to rapidly and massively decarbonize industry and mobility.”

Kallista Energy partners

Kallista Energy’s partners in this project are Clifford Chance (lawyers), SaarLB and BNP. Paribas (bank financing) and Vestas (wind turbine manufacturing and maintenance) also feature.

About Lhyfe and Kallista Energy

Lhyfe is a European group specializing in the production of green, renewable hydrogen. In 2021, Lhyfe inaugurated the world’s first industrial green hydrogen production site directly connected to a wind farm. Lhyfe is listed on the Euronext market in Paris.

Kallista Energy, founded in 2005, is an independent renewable energy producer operating wind and solar farms in France, the Netherlands and Germany. The company is backed by funds advised by Ardian on behalf of APG and Axa.

Invenergy seals four further contracts with Meta to supply nearly eight hundred megawatts of solar and wind power to the group’s data centres, lifting total cooperation between the two companies to one point eight gigawatts.
Pedro Azagra leaves his role as CEO of Avangrid to become CEO of Iberdrola, while Jose Antonio Miranda and Kimberly Harriman succeed him as CEO and Deputy CEO respectively of the American subsidiary.
The US investment fund Ares Management enters Plenitude's capital by acquiring a 20% stake from Eni, valuing the Italian company at 10 billion euros and reinforcing its integrated energy strategy.
ENGIE secures a contract to reduce Airbus' industrial emissions in France, Germany, and Spain, targeting an 85% decrease by 2030 through various local energy infrastructures.
Alain Rhéaume, Chairman of Boralex’s Board of Directors for eight years, will leave his position by December, following the appointment of his successor by the governance committee of the Canadian energy group.
Norwegian group Statkraft plans an annual cost reduction of NOK2.9bn ($292 million) by 2027, citing possible job cuts amid rising financial burdens and volatility in the European energy market.
EDF merges EDF Renouvelables and its International Division into EDF power solutions, led by Béatrice Buffon, to optimise its global 31 GW low-carbon energy portfolio and strengthen its international positioning.
TotalEnergies announces a strategic partnership with Mistral AI to establish a dedicated innovation laboratory integrating artificial intelligence tools aimed at enhancing industrial efficiency, research, and customer relations.
The Energy Transitions Commission warns of economic risks tied to growing protectionism around clean technologies, while calling for global consensus on carbon pricing.
Baker Hughes has reached an agreement to sell its precision sensor product line to Crane Company for $1.15bn, thereby refocusing its operations on core competencies in industrial and energy technologies.
American conglomerate American Electric Power sold 19.9% of two transmission subsidiaries to KKR and PSP Investments, raising $2.82bn to support its five-year $54bn investment plan.
The new mapping by Startup Nation Central identifies 165 active companies in Israel’s energy technologies, amid strong private funding and growing global market interest.
The new CEO of EDF, Bernard Fontana, aims to achieve €1 billion in operational cost savings for the French energy giant by 2030, prioritizing industrial contracts and the national nuclear sector.
CMS Energy Corporation has announced a cash tender offer for debt securities totalling $125 million, issued by Consumers Energy. The offer expires on July 3, 2025, with priority given to bonds submitted before June 17, 2025.
Vermilion Energy is exiting the U.S. market permanently by selling its assets for C$120mn ($87.88mn), refocusing its operations on Canada and Europe while reducing its debt and investment budget.
In 2024, Italian energy giant Eni paid approximately €8.4 billion to various global governments. These payments, primarily concentrated in Africa and Asia, reflect its commitments in the international energy sector.
The International Energy Agency projects a record-high global energy investment in 2025, driven by electricity and low-carbon technologies despite geopolitical and economic uncertainty.
The Czech regulatory authority launches an investigation into suspected collusion involving several major actors in the awarding of a thermal power plant, putting transparency of a strategic transaction for the energy sector at stake.
The Democratic Republic of Congo is set to replace its temporary ban on cobalt hydroxide exports with quotas, aiming to balance global demand, secure revenue, and stabilize market fluctuations.
European Energy secured EUR 145mn in financing from SEB and Swedbank to support wind, solar, and storage assets in Lithuania, reinforcing its regional expansion strategy.