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IHS Markit: production of carbon-free “green” hydrogen could be cost-competitive by 2030

By 2030 the production of hydrogen fuel by the electrolytic splitting of water—which can be carbon-free provided the electricity used in the process is produced by renewables—could become cost-competitive with currently predominant methods that require the use of natural gas as a feedstock, according to analysis by the IHS Markit Hydrogen and Renewable Gas Forum.

The hydrogen produced by electrolysis is rapidly developing from pilot to commercial-scale operation in many parts of the world.

Costs for producing green hydrogen have fallen 50% since 2015 and could be reduced by an additional 30% by 2025 due to the benefits of increased scale and more standardized manufacturing, among other factors.

The work that we have done for the IHS Markit Hydrogen Forum very much focuses on economies of scale as a way of reducing costs, developing dedicated renewables in order to get the load factor on the electrolyzer up and, of course, continued expectations of falling costs for renewables.

—Simon Blakey, IHS Markit Senior Advisor, Global Gas

Investment in “power-to-x” projects—of which hydrogen makes up the large majority—is growing rapidly. Investment is expected to grow from around $30 million in 2019 to more than $700 million in 2023.

Economies of scale are a primary driver for green hydrogen’s growing cost competitiveness. The average size for power-to-x projects scheduled for 2023 is 100 MW—ten times the capacity of the largest project in operation today, according to the IHS Markit Power-to-X Tracker, which tracks hydrogen projects around the world.

Hydrogen production that uses natural gas as a feedstock for methane reforming currently supplies the hydrogen to the chemical and refining industries that today make up the bulk of global hydrogen demand.

There is growing potential for hydrogen to be used in transport, heating, industry and power generation.

—Shankari Srinivasan, IHS Markit Vice president, Global and Renewable Gas, IHS Markit

Both green hydrogen and blue hydrogen—methane reforming coupled with carbon capture technology—are likely to play a role in the energy future as demand expands.

Blue and green hydrogen are extremely complementary. If they are developed in parallel, hydrogen will be able to make a big contribution to future energy demand, especially with the ambitious goals on carbon.

—Shankari Srinivasan

Hydrogen’s overall share in the energy mix will ultimately depend on the extent of decarbonization that is desired. In Europe, currently the primary market for hydrogen projects, hydrogen could account for as much as one third of the energy mix if the aim was 95% decarbonization or greater.

In Europe it is now widely agreed that electrification alone cannot deliver the level of emissions reduction that many countries aspire to. Hydrogen is a highly versatile fuel—both in terms of how it can be transported and the variety of its potential end-use applications. The greater the degree of a decarbonization, the greater the likely role of hydrogen in the energy future.

—Catherine Robinson, IHS Markit Executive Director, European Power, Hydrogen and Renewable Gas

Comments

dursun

"Mr Fusion" could be cost-competitive by 2030

Paroway

In 2030 it could be competitive with 2020 prices of solar and wind? That seems to be the cost of production only. What about the infrastructure to compress, deliver and pump it into vehicles etc? How cheap and durable will the fuel cells to use it be? Hydrogen will have it's uses, but they will remain limited.

SJC

At 5 cents per kWh, solar and wind could provide $5 per kilogram H2.

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