Author
Listed:
- Kiane Kleijne
(Radboud University
Eindhoven University of Technology)
- Mark A. J. Huijbregts
(Radboud University
TNO)
- Florian Knobloch
(University of Cambridge)
- Rosalie Zelm
(Radboud University)
- Jelle P. Hilbers
(Radboud University)
- Heleen Coninck
(Radboud University
Eindhoven University of Technology)
- Steef V. Hanssen
(Radboud University)
Abstract
Large-scale introduction of green hydrogen is envisioned to play an important role in reaching net-zero greenhouse gas emissions. The production and transport of green hydrogen itself is, however, not free from emissions. Here we assess the life-cycle greenhouse gas emissions for 1,025 planned green hydrogen facilities, covering different electrolyser technologies and renewable electricity sources in 72 countries. We demonstrate that the current exclusion of life-cycle emissions of renewables, component manufacturing and hydrogen leakage in regulations gives a false impression that green hydrogen can easily meet emission thresholds. Evaluating different hydrogen production configurations, we find median production emissions in the most optimistic configuration of 2.9 kg CO2 equivalents (CO2e) kg H2−1 (0.8–4.6 kgCO2e kg H2−1, 95% confidence interval). Including 1,000 km transport via pipeline or liquid hydrogen shipping adds another 1.5 or 1.8 kgCO2e kg H2−1, respectively. We conclude that achieving low-emission green hydrogen at scale requires well-chosen production configurations with substantial emission reductions along the supply chain.
Suggested Citation
Kiane Kleijne & Mark A. J. Huijbregts & Florian Knobloch & Rosalie Zelm & Jelle P. Hilbers & Heleen Coninck & Steef V. Hanssen, 2024.
"Worldwide greenhouse gas emissions of green hydrogen production and transport,"
Nature Energy, Nature, vol. 9(9), pages 1139-1152, September.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:natene:v:9:y:2024:i:9:d:10.1038_s41560-024-01563-1
DOI: 10.1038/s41560-024-01563-1
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