Skip to main content

€7.2bn 'green' upgrade for Italian motorway

The A22 between Modena and Bolzano will offer hydrogen filling and EV charging
By David Arminas November 21, 2022 Read time: 3 mins
The hydrogen production and filling station along the A22 and run by Autostrada del Brennero remains the only such station in Italy, but more are coming (image: Autostrada del Brennero)

An upgrade to northern Italy’s most important autostrada includes more EV charging stations as well more hydrogen filling stations, according to concessionaire Autostrada del Brennero.

The €7.2 billion investment will transform the A22 motorway between Modena and Bolzano into one of Italy’s greenest intermodal corridors, according to Diego Cattoni, chief executive of Autostrada del Brennero, as reported in Italy’s Sole 24 Ore newspaper. A major rail line runs along the same corridor, north from Modena, past Bolzano and to the border with Austria.

The 314km A22 connects Pianura padana, the city of Modena and the A1 motorway to Austria through the Brenner Pass, located in the municipality of Brenner.

According to the concessionaire, there are already 57 electric vehicle charging stations and 22 service areas – along with 24 toll booths. The upgrade will push the number of EV charging points to more than 100. It will also add four hydrogen filling stations to the one existing station that was opened in 2014 in Bolzano Sud. It was the first plant in Italy for the production, storage and distribution of green hydrogen and remains the only such centre in the country.

The system was created by Autostrada del Brennero and managed by the Institute for Technological Innovation a foundation established jointly by the Italian Ministry of Education, Universities and Research and the Ministry of Economy and Finance to promote basic and applied research.

Autostrada del Brennero says that the hydrogen plant can produce 180m² of hydrogen per hour for a total per year of over 1.5 million cubic meters. The hydrogen distributor has the capacity to fuel around 15 coaches with hydrogen per day, with an autonomy of 200-250km or up to 700 cars.

The consequent annual saving for the environment is around 525,000 litres of petrol or 440,000 litres of diesel, which correspond to over 1,200,000kg of CO2 not emitted into the atmosphere. The long-term objective of Autostrada del Brennero is to create a distribution network with fuelling stations at intervals of no more than 100km.

"We are convinced that it will be innovation and technology that will help us win the challenge of sustainability," noted Cattoni. “We must immediately offer a plurality of alternatives to traditional fuels."

He says that that “capillary fuel distribution infrastructure” is essential. “Our business plan provides for the development of another five new plants.”

The new “capillary” plants – hydrogen refueling statioins - will be in Brenner, Trento, Rovereto, Verona and Campogalliano.

Initially, these will be refueling points, but the business plan already plans to transform them into as many production centres, which will exploit the most suitable renewable energy for each area crossed by the A22. The concessionaire is also looking at EV stations powered by biomass and wind turbines.

Related Content

  • University study debunks EV emissions ‘myth’
    March 26, 2020
    Fears that electric vehicles (EVs) could actually increase carbon emissions are 'a myth', according to new research.
  • Swarco eVolt appoints Siemens’ Anne Buckingham as head of sales
    January 18, 2019
    UK-based Swarco eVolt has named Anne Buckingham, former head of electromobility at Siemens, as head of sales – effective 11 February. Swarco eVolt, an electric vehicle (EV) charging business, also plans to launch a series of e-mobility products and services in 2019. It includes the release of new 100KW and 150KW versions of the Raption Rapid Charger, an all-in-one solution in which the power module is housed within the main unit. Justin Meyer, general manager at Swarco eVolt, says: “In 2018 we recorded a
  • New Zealand’s first weather-activated road signs go live
    November 3, 2015
    New Zealand’s first weather-activated road signs with adjustable speed limits have gone live on State Highway 29 over the Kaimai Range. The 22 high-tech signs are part of an innovative NZ Transport Agency trial that aims to reduce the crash rate on the steep road, which links the Waikato and the Bay of Plenty. The variable speed signs, along with four web cameras, will be linked to a weather station at the summit of the Kaimai Range. The Transport Agency will monitor the weather station and adjust the
  • European tunnel upgrades following new safety legislation
    August 20, 2015
    Across Europe there is a very mixed picture of compliance to latest safety standards for road tunnels. Best practice has emerged, however, in the wake of European legislation. Jon Masters reports High profile fatal fires following accidents in the Mont Blanc, Tauern and Gotthard tunnels prompted the 2004 European Union Directive 2004/54 on road tunnel safety. This meant all EU member states would have to meet new standards of safety in road tunnels by 30 April 2014. The Directive applied to all tunnels over