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Future hydrogen economies imply environmental trade-offs and a supply-demand mismatch

Tom Terlouw, Lorenzo Rosa, Christian Bauer, Russell McKenna

2024Nature Communications158 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Hydrogen will play a key role in decarbonizing economies. Here, we quantify the costs and environmental impacts of possible large-scale hydrogen economies, using four prospective hydrogen demand scenarios for 2050 ranging from 111–614 megatonne H 2 year −1 . Our findings confirm that renewable (solar photovoltaic and wind) electrolytic hydrogen production generates at least 50–90% fewer greenhouse gas emissions than fossil-fuel-based counterparts without carbon capture and storage. However, electrolytic hydrogen production could still result in considerable environmental burdens, which requires reassessing the concept of green hydrogen. Our global analysis highlights a few salient points: (i) a mismatch between economical hydrogen production and hydrogen demand across continents seems likely; (ii) region-specific limitations are inevitable since possibly more than 60% of large hydrogen production potentials are concentrated in water-scarce regions; and (iii) upscaling electrolytic hydrogen production could be limited by renewable power generation and natural resource potentials.

Topics & Concepts

Hydrogen productionHydrogen economyRenewable energyHydrogenGreenhouse gasNatural resource economicsEnvironmental scienceProduction (economics)Fossil fuelHydrogen technologiesEconomicsEcologyWaste managementChemistryEngineeringMicroeconomicsBiologyOrganic chemistryEnergy and Environment ImpactsHybrid Renewable Energy SystemsElectric Vehicles and Infrastructure
Future hydrogen economies imply environmental trade-offs and a supply-demand mismatch | Litcius