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Is green hydrogen the fuel of the future?

Everyone is excited about green hydrogen as the final piece of the puzzle to get to net zero. But can it live up to the hype?

Hydrogen gas has long been recognised as a potentially valuable tool for tackling climate change. The most abundant element in the universe, it is also a clean-burning gas and 鈥 in theory 鈥 could be used to power almost anything, from our cars and homes, to planes and ships, to agriculture and heavy industry.

We already produce millions of tons of hydrogen each year for use in the chemicals industry, by extracting it from natural gas - a process which emits CO2. But hydrogen can also be made by splitting water molecules with electricity 鈥 and when that electricity is powered by renewables it comes without a carbon price tag.

It is this so-called 鈥榞reen hydrogen鈥 that is currently generating hype around the world as the 鈥榝uel of the future鈥 and the missing piece of the decarbonisation puzzle. Across the world, governments are announcing far-reaching hydrogen strategies. Fossil fuel companies, too, are investing big, hoping to cash in on the 鈥榟ydrogen boom鈥.

But for all the talk of green hydrogen as a miracle fuel, it has a long list of drawbacks too. It is expensive, difficult to store, inefficient and explosive. Previous hype cycles around hydrogen have ended in failure for a combination of these reasons. So while experts agree that hydrogen does have a role to play in decarbonisation, the question is 鈥 how big should it be? And are we about to spend hundreds of billions of dollars on a white elephant?

Contributors:
Mike Strizski, founder of the Hydrogen House Project
Michael Leibreich, founder of Bloomberg NEF
Sonja van Renssen, Managing Editor of Energy Monitor
Nawal Al-Hosany, Permanent Representative of the UAE to the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA)

Presenters: Graihagh Jackson and Marnie Chesterton
Producer: Zoe Gelber
Editor: Ros Jones

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27 minutes

Last on

Mon 9 Aug 2021 19:06GMT

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  • Mon 9 Aug 2021 03:06GMT
  • Mon 9 Aug 2021 08:06GMT
  • Mon 9 Aug 2021 12:32GMT
  • Mon 9 Aug 2021 19:06GMT

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