Challenge: improving water quality while reducing site impact
The project aimed to remove around 18,500 m³ of sediment from the lake and the southern harbour area, helping to improve water clarity and reduce the risk of blue-green algae development.
Instead of transporting the dredged material by road, Verboon Maasland pumped it directly through pipelines to a nearby depot prepared by KUIPERS Infra Strijen.
This approach avoided around 900 truck movements, reducing traffic, noise and transport-related emissions around the site.
Solution: a floating energy platform powered by two GEH2
To meet the dredger’s power requirements, Verboon Maasland deployed an autonomous floating energy platform measuring 21 metres long by 12 metres wide.
The platform included:
- Two EODev GEH2 hydrogen fuel cell power generators
- Two green hydrogen containers of 280 kg each,
- One BESS with 400 kWh of net capacity
- A 60-metre marine power cable connecting the platform to the dredger
- a roll-on / roll-off system enabling hydrogen container replacement without crane handling
The GEH2 units provided the main clean electricity supply for the operation. The battery system complemented the installation by absorbing power peaks and load fluctuations typical of dredging applications.
Key figures
23 MWh
generated without emissions
135 kW
average power demand
900
truck movements avoided
Powering a cutter suction dredger in real operating conditions
During operation, the cutter suction dredger required around 135 kW on average, with peak loads reaching 300 A, equivalent to approximately 202 kVA.
Over 15 effective working days, the GEH2 units produced around 23 MWh of clean electricity, demonstrating the ability of green hydrogen power generation to support a demanding, mobile and off-grid worksite.
This configuration enabled the dredging operation to be carried out without conventional diesel generators, while maintaining the autonomy and flexibility required for work on the water.
Why hydrogen was the right fit for this application
Given the dredger’s duty cycle, a battery-only solution would have required multiple large battery packs, significant charging capacity and more complex logistics.
The hydrogen-based setup offered a better balance between autonomy, footprint, operational continuity and logistics. The battery system ensured stable power delivery during peak demand, while the GEH2 units provided the main source of clean electricity.
The project also illustrates the role that public procurement can play in accelerating the adoption of clean technologies. By integrating sustainability and innovation criteria into its tender, WSHD enabled Verboon Maasland to propose a concrete alternative to the diesel generators traditionally used on this type of project.
A concrete example for off-grid worksites and equipment rental
The Binnenbedijkte Maas project demonstrates that hydrogen can meet the needs of demanding, mobile and off-grid operations where diesel is still often the default solution.
By using EODev’s GEH2 generators, Verboon Maasland and Genpower showed that heavy waterworks can be carried out with zero local emissions, reduced noise and simplified energy logistics.
The involvement of Genpower, EODev’s distributor in the Netherlands and a specialist in temporary power solutions, also highlights the key role that equipment rental companies can play in deploying zero-emission solutions for worksites, infrastructure projects and off-grid operations.