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Energy
Key Facts
—A first. The IFC, the World Bank’s private-sector arm, chose Uruguay for its first-ever green hydrogen investment anywhere in the world.
—The money. The deal is a $20 million green loan from the IFC alongside Grupo Santander, backing a project called Kahírós.
—What it does. Solar power will make hydrogen to run six fuel-cell trucks hauling timber for pulp producer Montes del Plata.
—The timeline. Operations are due to start by the end of 2026, cutting about 870 tonnes of carbon dioxide a year.
—The prize. Backers say the wider industry could create more than 30,000 direct jobs by 2040.
A country of three million people has just beaten the field to a global milestone in Uruguay green hydrogen. The World Bank’s private-sector arm picked it for the very first green hydrogen investment it has ever made, anywhere.
Green hydrogen is fuel made by using clean electricity to split water, producing no carbon when it is made or burned. It is one of the most talked-about tools for cleaning up industries that batteries cannot easily reach, such as heavy freight and heavy industry.
The catch worldwide is that almost none of it gets built. Fewer than one in twenty announced projects has reached the point where real money is committed, which is exactly what makes Uruguay’s deal notable.
What the Uruguay green hydrogen deal actually funds
The structure is deliberately modest and practical. The IFC is putting in a twenty-million-dollar green loan alongside the bank Grupo Santander, with extra support from a United Nations renewable-energy fund.
The money backs a pilot called Kahírós, run by a group of Uruguayan firms. Solar panels will generate power, that power will make hydrogen, and the hydrogen will run six specially built fuel-cell trucks carrying timber to Montes del Plata, one of the country’s big pulp producers.
It is the country’s first integrated green hydrogen system for freight, and it is meant to start running by the end of this year. On its own it will cut about eight hundred and seventy tonnes of carbon a year, roughly the same as taking three hundred cars off the road.
Why a small pilot carries big weight
The point is not the size but the signal. When a AAA-rated development lender makes its global debut in a technology here rather than in a larger market, it tells other investors the country is a credible place to try clean-energy bets.
Uruguay has earned that reputation. It already runs almost entirely on renewable electricity, which gives it the clean power a hydrogen industry needs and a track record that reassures cautious lenders.
The choice of freight is telling. Long-haul trucking is one of the hardest things to electrify with batteries alone, so using hydrogen to move timber is a real-world test of whether the fuel can work where cleaner options fall short.
There is a commercial anchor built in. By tying the trucks to a single large pulp customer, the project has guaranteed demand from day one, which is exactly the kind of certainty that early clean-energy ventures usually lack.
What the Uruguay green hydrogen bet means for the region
For a foreign reader, the story is a template. If a freight-hydrogen pilot works in Uruguay, the same model can be copied in other markets, which is precisely why the IFC frames it as a replicable proof of concept rather than a one-off.
The ambition runs well beyond six trucks. Backers argue the wider industry could support tens of thousands of jobs by 2040 and turn a small farming and forestry economy into an exporter of clean fuel, though that promise still has to survive the hard test of costs and power prices.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is green hydrogen and why does it matter here?
It is a fuel made by using clean electricity to split water, emitting no carbon. It matters for Uruguay because the country already runs on renewable power, giving it the cheap clean electricity a hydrogen industry needs to compete.
How big is the IFC investment in Uruguay green hydrogen?
The IFC is providing a twenty-million-dollar green loan alongside Grupo Santander and a United Nations fund. It is a modest sum, but it is the IFC’s first-ever green hydrogen investment worldwide, which is why it draws attention.
When will the project start operating?
The Kahírós project is due to begin operations by the end of 2026. It will run six fuel-cell trucks on green hydrogen and is expected to cut about 870 tonnes of carbon dioxide each year.
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