Coverage: DE · SE · NO · FI · FR · GB·17,520 companies listed
By Hydrogen Industry Insider (12yr industrial gas & electrochemical systems)·14 March 2026·3 min read

Hydrogen Storage & Transport in Finland: The Real Bottleneck

Everyone obsesses over Finnish electrolyzer capacity. But if you can't move hydrogen from production to consumption, the capacity is academic. Finland's hydrogen logistics infrastructure barely exists.

I've spent two years watching Finland pour investment into electrolyzer announcements while largely ignoring how to move hydrogen from Point A to Point B. This is like building power plants without transmission lines.

Finland's Transport Challenge

Finland's hydrogen demand is industrial: Neste's refinery (Porvoo, Europe's most profitable) uses ~160,000 tonnes/year of grey hydrogen for hydrotreating renewable diesel. Replacing this with green hydrogen is the single largest electrolysis opportunity in the Nordics. P2X Solutions (Harjavalta) commissioned Finland's first green hydrogen plant in 2024. Fingrid's grid infrastructure can support large electrolyzer connections in western Finland (Ostrobothnia), but eastern Finland faces transmission constraints. The Finnish Hydrogen Cluster (18 companies) coordinates development. VTT Technical Research Centre provides electrolyzer testing services.

The Logistics Problem in Numbers

Green hydrogen is best produced where renewable energy is cheapest. It's consumed where industry is located. Finland's hydrogen corridor runs from western Finland (Ostrobothnia wind) to the southern coast (Neste Porvoo, Helsinki industrial demand). Fingrid's grid can partially substitute for hydrogen transport via electricity, but losses are significant.

Today's options for moving hydrogen:

Compressed gas trucks: 300-500 kg per truck. For a 10 MW electrolyzer producing ~4 tonnes/day, you need 8-13 truck trips daily. Pilot-scale only.

Liquid hydrogen: 3-4 tonnes per cryogenic truck, but liquefaction consumes 30-35% of the hydrogen's energy content.

Pipeline: The only option that scales. Europe has ~1,600 km of hydrogen pipeline today. REPowerEU envisions 28,000 km by 2030. Current construction rate: ~50 km/year.

Pipeline Infrastructure in Finland

Finland's gas grid is small (limited pipeline network, mostly LNG import). Gasgrid Finland is evaluating hydrogen backbone options, but volumes are currently too small to justify dedicated pipeline infrastructure. The Baltic Connector could theoretically carry hydrogen to Estonia.

Alternative Carriers

LOHC (Liquid Organic Hydrogen Carriers): Hydrogenious LOHC Technologies (Erlangen) leads development. Benzyltoluene-based system allows transport at ambient conditions in existing fuel infrastructure. But dehydrogenation is energy-intensive.

Ammonia: Favored for intercontinental transport. Yara and OCI are positioning. Reconversion loses 15-20% of energy content.

What Finnish Procurement Teams Should Know

  1. Budget 40-60% of total project CAPEX for logistics — not 10-15%
  2. Secure transport contracts before finalizing production contracts
  3. Consider on-site production first — even at higher $/kg, avoiding transport may be cheaper on a delivered-cost basis
  4. Track Finnish pipeline conversion timelines — they are aspirational

Our directory indexes 179 hydrogen supply chain companies in Finland, including storage, distribution, and infrastructure providers.

---

Data from PRH (Patentti- ja rekisterihallitus), European Hydrogen Backbone study, and CORDIS. 179 companies register-verified.

Data Sources
  • PRH (Patentti- ja rekisterihallitus)
  • European Hydrogen Backbone study
  • Finland Carbon Neutrality 2035

Frequently Asked Questions

Does Finland have hydrogen pipeline infrastructure?
Finland's gas grid is limited. Gasgrid Finland is evaluating hydrogen backbone options. Current volumes don't justify dedicated pipeline infrastructure.
What is the most cost-effective way to transport hydrogen in Finland?
For distances under 200 km, compressed gas trucks work for small volumes. For longer distances, pipelines are most cost-effective but barely exist in Finland today. On-site production co-located with demand avoids transport entirely and may be the best near-term option.
Hydrogen Storage & Transport in Finland: The Real Bottleneck — Hydrogen Supply Chain & Infrastructure