HY4Link Corridor Maps Electrolyser Grid for EU Hydrogen Certification

HY4Link Corridor Maps Electrolyser Grid for EU Hydrogen Certification Photo via Unsplash
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HY4Link Corridor Maps Electrolyser Grid for EU Hydrogen Certification

HY4LinkRED IIIRFNBOelectrolyserdigital twin
June 10, 2026  •  3 min read
When Europe’s renewable hydrogen mandates take force, certification will depend on proving electrolyser output meets additionality and temporal-correlation rules—a task that requires granular infrastructure data. The HY4Link project, a 450-kilometre pipeline linking Belgium, Luxembourg and France, is embedding digital planning tools from inception to map electrolyser capacity, grid connections and load profiles against RED III’s renewable fuel-of-non-biological-origin (RFNBO) framework.
450 km
Cross-border pipeline length
2030
Target commissioning year
3 countries
Belgium, Luxembourg, France
2024
Project announcement date

Digital Infrastructure Planning for RFNBO Compliance

HY4Link’s partners—Fluxys Belgium, Creos Luxembourg, GRTgaz and Teréga in France—announced the integrated cross-border hydrogen infrastructure project in June 2024. The corridor will connect Belgium’s North Sea import terminals and domestic electrolysers to industrial demand centres in Luxembourg’s steel sector and France’s Lorraine and Grand Est regions. Under RED III rules effective from 2025, renewable hydrogen sold as transport fuel or counted toward ReFuelEU Aviation sustainable-fuel quotas must demonstrate additionality (new renewable electricity capacity), temporal correlation (production matched to renewable generation within the same hour) and geographic correlation (within the same bidding zone or directly connected).

Pipeline operators are deploying digital-twin modelling to simulate electrolyser dispatch, wind and solar intermittency, and storage buffer requirements. These models generate the audit trails that certification bodies need to verify RFNBO status. For example, an electrolyser cluster in Antwerp feeding the HY4Link network must log hourly renewable-electricity sourcing, hydrogen output volumes and dispatch schedules. The digital twin captures this data in real time, enabling operators to demonstrate compliance with the delegated acts under RED III Article 27.

Electrolyser-Scale Data as a Policy Prerequisite

The European Commission’s ReFuelEU Aviation regulation mandates 1.2% synthetic-fuel uptake at EU airports by 2030, rising to 35% by 2050. Most of that volume will be Power-to-Liquid e-kerosene synthesised from green hydrogen and captured CO₂. Electrolyser output destined for SAF production must carry RFNBO certificates, which in turn require granular performance metrics: capacity factor, electrochemical efficiency (kWh per kg H₂), grid connection type and renewable-electricity source.

HY4Link’s infrastructure planning embeds these data points from the outset. By mapping electrolyser sites, capacity and grid-connection topology across three jurisdictions, the consortium is building a shared data layer that national certification schemes in Belgium (Federal Public Service Economy), Luxembourg (Institut Luxembourgeois de la Normalisation) and France (France Hydrogène) can query. This approach mirrors the EU’s REDII database architecture, where fuel suppliers upload batch certificates with origin and emissions metadata. The difference is that hydrogen infrastructure is being designed with certification-ready data architecture, rather than retrofitting compliance onto legacy assets.

Temporal Correlation and the .ai Justification

Temporal correlation—matching electrolyser run-time to renewable generation within the same hour—requires predictive dispatch algorithms that optimise for both market prices and regulatory compliance. Machine-learning models trained on historical wind and solar output can forecast curtailment windows, enabling electrolysers to ramp up when renewable electrons are abundant and cheap, then throttle back during fossil-heavy grid hours. This avoids the regulatory risk of using grid power that fails the RED III ‘additional renewable electricity’ test.

HY4Link partners have not disclosed specific AI tools, but the digital-twin concept implies continuous optimisation. The .ai domain extension signals a commitment to data-driven operations—electrolyser fleet management, predictive maintenance on pipeline compressors, and automated RFNBO certificate generation. As RED III enforcement tightens, hydrogen infrastructure operators that lack real-time performance data will struggle to compete for offtake contracts with SAF producers and steelmakers who demand certified renewable molecules.

Bottom Line
HY4Link’s 450-kilometre Belgium-Luxembourg-France hydrogen corridor demonstrates that RED III compliance begins at the design stage, not the audit stage. By integrating electrolyser mapping, digital-twin simulation and RFNBO-ready data architecture into cross-border pipeline planning, the consortium is setting a template for how hydrogen infrastructure can meet the temporal-correlation and additionality rules that underpin Europe’s renewable-fuel mandates—and justifying the .ai lens through predictive dispatch and automated certification workflows.

Sources

Featured image via Unsplash.

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