Spain-headed power utility Iberdrola Group has announced that it has signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with AECOM, a global leader in the infrastructure sector, Ancitel Energia e Ambiente, a company specializing in regional sustainable development, and Cinque International, a company active in implementing solutions that use green hydrogen, to undertake the project to convert the Apennine railway, which links Sansepolcro (Arezzo) and Sulmona (L'Aquila) in Italy, to green hydrogen.

The over 300 km Sansepolcro – Sulmona railway line is strategic as it connects inland areas of Italy, and runs through Toscana, Umbría, Lacio, and Abruzos, as well as Perugia, Terni, Rieti, and L’Aquila regions.
Part of the line has not been electrified and is used by diesel locomotives that have reached the end of their useful lives. According to Iberdrola, the switch to green hydrogen as a fuel is seen as a “drastically less expensive alternative than traditional electrification and will bring innovation and development to areas affected by depopulation and deindustrialization.
Part of a green revitalization project
The MoU also includes an evaluation of the technical viability of converting the Ferrovia dei Due Mare (Two Seas Railway) to green hydrogen, which will connect Fiumincino and Rome airports with San Benedetto del Tronto by way of Rieti, Amatrice, and Ascoli Piceno making Rome the leading city in the world in terms of trains powered by green hydrogen.
It is an opportunity to put our skills at the service of this ambitious project which, in addition to having a major environmental impact, is also intended to have a significant economic and social impact, supporting areas affected by seismic events in recent years, commented Lorenzo Costantini, Country Manager for Iberdrola in Italy.
The conversion initiatives are part of an integrated, sustainable project to revitalize the Central Apennines, involving AECOM, Ancitel Energia e Ambiente and Cinque International.
The development project focuses on the use of electric trains driven by hydrogen as a lever to attract productive investment in areas affected by the earthquakes in 2009, 2016, and 2017, which have suffered from population and economic decline in recent years, phenomena exacerbated by the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic.
The use of new energy and environmental technologies are at the heart of this initiative, with green hydrogen produced from renewable sources taking a leading role.
Preselected European Clean Hydrogen Alliance project
The Sansepolcro – Sulmona hydrogen railway project has already passed through several stages. In 2019, it was submitted to Italy’s Hydrogen Bureau at the Ministry of Economic Development (MiSE). In 2020, after a preliminary viability study coordinated by the Scuola Superiore S. Anna in Pisa, a technical bureau was set up in the MiSE in collaboration with the Ministry of Infrastructure and Transport (MIT), the FS, and the RFI group.
In December 2020, a process was launched to gather support from local communities in order to eliminate bureaucratic and administrative red tape. In July 2021, the project was preselected by the European Commission with the European Clean Hydrogen Alliance.
While executing the plan, the initiative’s promoters will continue to have conversations with the regions about the route of the railway, with the Grupo Ferrovie dello Stato and with other public and private local agents, involving them in developing and carrying out the project.
Several green hydrogen projects are in the pipeline
Iberdrola is carrying out green hydrogen initiatives and projects in Europe – in countries including Spain, the United Kingdom, and now, Italy – as well as in the United States and Brazil. Once operational, these will contribute to the decarbonization of industry, transport, and heavy goods transport as well as developing the value chain.
In Spain alone, the company has submitted 53 projects to Next Generation EU, which are now among the 150 initiatives developed as part of this programme, mobilising investments of EUR 2.5 billion.
In Spain, Iberdrola is currently building the largest green hydrogen plan in Europe to produce fertilizers. Fertiberia will start operating the plant in Puertollano, Ciudad Real later this year.