Made in Europe for the world.
Built for resilience.
Manifesto publication on 4 February
Electrolysers for Europe (E4E) is the unified voice of Europe's electrolyser manufacturers — companies that design, build, and deploy world-class electrolyser technologies that turn renewable electricity into clean hydrogen.
European electrolyser manufacturers at the forefront of clean hydrogen technology
Technology providers, system integrators, and engineering partners
Innovators delivering industrial-scale clean-hydrogen solutions
E4E works to align industry and policymakers around a common vision for 2030 and beyond — enabling clean hydrogen production, industrial competitiveness, and energy security.
By 2040, all European hydrogen demand can be met by electrolysers, contributing critically to sustainability and resilience goals.
With Europe leading globally in electrolysis, we can unlock up to €200bn in export value, making electrolysers a key contributor to European industrial competitiveness.
The green hydrogen value chain can create approximately 1 million direct jobs across the EU — while securing millions more in downstream industries.
With the right policy framework and successful scale-up, electrolytic hydrogen will become the most competitive form of clean hydrogen.

Europe is at a decisive moment. Global competition is accelerating, clean-tech investments are shifting, and strategic value chains are being reshaped.
The next five years will determine whether Europe builds — or loses — leadership in electrolysers.
On February 4, we set out our vision for 2030 and beyond:
Achieving Europe's electrolyser leadership and creating real economic value and lasting growth for the EU.
This vision will only become reality with bold, decisive political action.
Manufacturing capacity:
1 GW more than 10 GW
in just a few years.
Promise honoured.
Capacity delivered.
Target:
6GW by 2024
and 40 GW by 2030.
Reality:
<1GW installed
The EU target is far from being met.

We kept our promise.
Policymakers must now do the same.

The choices made now will decide whether Europe leads the technologies defining the clean industrial age or becomes dependent on importing them from elsewhere.
Manifesto publication on 4 February