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Production of hydrogen from offshore wind in China and cost-competitive supply to Japan

Shaojie Song, Haiyang Lin, Peter Sherman, Xi Yang, Chris Nielsen, Xinyu Chen, Michael B. McElroy

2021Nature Communications168 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The Japanese government has announced a commitment to net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050. It envisages an important role for hydrogen in the nation's future energy economy. This paper explores the possibility that a significant source for this hydrogen could be produced by electrolysis fueled by power generated from offshore wind in China. Hydrogen could be delivered to Japan either as liquid, or bound to a chemical carrier such as toluene, or as a component of ammonia. The paper presents an analysis of factors determining the ultimate cost for this hydrogen, including expenses for production, storage, conversion, transport, and treatment at the destination. It concludes that the Chinese source could be delivered at a volume and cost consistent with Japan's idealized future projections.

Topics & Concepts

Renewable energyEnvironmental scienceGreenhouse gasHydrogen economyHydrogen productionOffshore wind powerChinaHydrogenProduction (economics)Natural resource economicsSubmarine pipelineBusinessWind powerEnvironmental economicsWaste managementEconomicsChemistryEngineeringOceanographyMicroeconomicsGeologyElectrical engineeringPolitical scienceLawGeotechnical engineeringOrganic chemistryHybrid Renewable Energy SystemsIntegrated Energy Systems OptimizationElectric Vehicles and Infrastructure
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