Green hydrogen's time has come, say advocates eying
post-pandemic world
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[May 08, 2020] By
Nina Chestney and Kate Abnett
LONDON (Reuters) - Hydrogen has long been
touted as a clean alternative to fossil fuels. Now, as major economies
prepare green investments to kickstart growth, advocates spy a golden
chance to drag the niche energy into the mainstream of a post-pandemic
world.
Green hydrogen was pushed to the fore last week when Fatih Birol, head
of the International Energy Agency, said the technology was "ready for
the big time" and urged governments to channel investments into the
fuel.
Some countries, including the Netherlands, Australia and Portugal, have
already begun investing in the technology. Now investors, politicians
and businesses are pushing the European Union and others to use its
post-crisis recovery plan to support hydrogen in areas like trucking and
heavy industry.
The promise of hydrogen as a fuel to help power vehicles and energy
plants has been a talking point since the 1970s, but it is currently too
expensive for widespread use. Proponents say infrastructure investment
and more demand from transport, gas grids and industry will bring the
cost down.
Most hydrogen used today is extracted from natural gas in a process that
produces carbon emissions, which defeats the object for many
policymakers. But there is potential to extract "green" hydrogen from
water with electrolysis, an energy-intensive but carbon-free process if
powered by renewable electricity.
EU officials, one of whom described green hydrogen as the "holy grail",
said it could replace fossil fuels in sectors that lack alternatives to
align operations with the EU's Green Deal plan to reduce net emissions
to zero by 2050.
"Hydrogen could solve a lot of problems. We need everything else as well
but the political interest is because to achieve deep energy efficiency
and decarbonisation, hydrogen seems relatively easy," said Jesse Scott,
senior advisor at think-tank Agora Energiewende.
"It is less alarming (for policymakers) than some other elements for
meeting net zero," she added, such as carbon removal technology for
example.
HYDROGEN GAINING MOMENTUM
Momentum appears to be building; EU industry chief Thierry Breton met
hydrogen companies online this week to discuss the bloc's recovery from
the pandemic.
"We could use these circumstances, where loads of public money are going
to be needed into the energy system, to jump forward towards a hydrogen
economy," said Diederik Samsom, who heads the European Commission's
climate cabinet.
This could result in hydrogen use scaling up faster than was expected
before the pandemic, he added.
The European Commission has earmarked clean hydrogen - a loose term
which can include gas-based hydrogen, if fitted with technology to
capture the resulting emissions - as a "priority area" for industry in
its Green Deal.
Over the past year, several governments, including Germany, Britain,
Australia and Japan, have announced or have been working on hydrogen
strategies and the pace has picked up over the past month during the
pandemic.
This week, Australia set aside A$300 million ($191 million) to jumpstart
hydrogen projects. Portugal plans to build a new solar-powered hydrogen
plant which will produce hydrogen by electrolysis by 2023.
The Netherlands unveiled a hydrogen strategy in late March, outlining
plans for 500 megawatts (MW) of green electrolyser capacity by 2025. A
German hydrogen strategy is expected later this month.
The Dutch government is pushing for the EU to follow suit and present an
"action plan" for clean hydrogen, a spokesperson told Reuters.
CAN IT BECOME AFFORDABLE?
When it comes to transport, hydrogen fuel cells trail electric batteries
in the push for greener cars, given their higher price and the lack of
refuelling stations. But proponents see potential for heavier vehicles.
Daimler and Volvo Trucks unveiled plans last month to bring hydrogen
fuelled heavy-duty vehicles to market within the decade.
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French President Emmanuel Macron attends a presentation of the new
Febus hydrogen bus in Pau, France, January 14, 2020. REUTERS/Regis
Duvignau/Pool/File Photo
Hydrogen gas is already used in industry to produce ammonia, which goes
into fertilisers, and methanol, used to make plastic.
A major drawback of the green hydrogen that governments are most
interested in, is that it requires a large amount of renewable
electricity to produce. The good news is, renewables prices have fallen
sharply in recent years.
According to Bernstein analysts, hydrogen made from fossil fuels
currently costs between $1-$1.8/kg. Green hydrogen can cost around $6/kg
today, making it significantly more expensive than the fossil fuel
alternatives.
However, increased demand could reduce the cost of electrolysis. Coupled
with falling renewable energy costs, green hydrogen could fall to
$1.7/kg by 2050 and possibly sub-$1/kg, making it competitive with
natural gas. Higher carbon prices would also encourage the shift.
"Clean hydrogen produced from electricity is around three times more
expensive than that from natural gas, but solar and wind costs have
decreased in recent years and if they continue to fall, clean hydrogen
produced with lower electricity costs would become more affordable,"
said Philippe Vie, global energy and utilities lead at consultancy
Capgemini.
"On hydrogen we are right now where we were with renewables in
2000-2005. Ten to 15 years is probably a good time lapse to become
competitive," he added.
MAJOR MONEY NEEDED
Any serious attempt at large-scale use - either in industry or
transportation - would also require major infrastructure investments.
For example, power from an offshore wind farm would need to be connected
to an electrolyser that produces the green hydrogen, which would then
need to be transported to end users.
Europe has around 135 MW of electrolyser capacity, but planned green
hydrogen projects could bring that to 5.2 gigawatts, according to
consultancy Wood Mackenzie. But many projects hinge on further
investment partners or subsidies, which advocates fear will be scarcer
in the COVID-19-induced economic slump.
"Investments that would have been foreseen to be done now are not made
because production is delayed," Jorgo Chatzimarkakis, secretary general
of lobby group Hydrogen Europe, told Reuters.
To help lower costs, several projects are being worked on across the gas
infrastructure, industry, mining and energy sectors.
Royal Dutch Shell <RDSa.L> and Dutch gas firm Gasunie unveiled plans in
February to build a mammoth wind-powered hydrogen plant in the northern
Netherlands, capable of producing 800,000 tonnes of hydrogen by 2040.
In Germany, oil refinery Raffinerie Heide is embarking on a project
using excess wind energy and abundant water supply in the region to
produce hydrogen to make kerosene.
"The price of hydrogen we pay for now is four times natural gas from an
external source fed through the pipeline and produced 30 km away," said
CEO Juergen Wollschlaeger.
A big fear for companies in the hydrogen industry is that they will be
unable to take advantage of the unique opportunity presented by vast
economic stimulus packages, and that governments will favour supporting
traditional high-carbon fuel sectors that have been hit hard by a
collapse in energy demand.
"For us, that will be the question to be answered in the next weeks.
Will the carbon fuel industry succeed in convincing the officials to
support them?" Bernd Hübner, chief financial officer at German green
hydrogen start-up Hy2gen said.
(Reporting by Nina Chestney and Kate Abnett; Additional reporting by
Sonali Paul in Melbourne and Aaron Sheldrick in Tokyo; Editing by Pravin
Char)
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