• Latest
  • Trending
  • All
  • News
  • Lifestyle
How falling solar costs have renewed clean hydrogen hopes thumbnail

How falling solar costs have renewed clean hydrogen hopes

August 10, 2020
New York State Young Republicans put in timeout after racist messages exposed thumbnail

New York State Young Republicans put in timeout after racist messages exposed

October 19, 2025
It’s the Governor vs. the Oysterman, and Democrats’ Pick Will Tell Us a Lot About the Party’s Future thumbnail

It’s the Governor vs. the Oysterman, and Democrats’ Pick Will Tell Us a Lot About the Party’s Future

October 17, 2025
Our offense vs. their defense: Chicago Bears thumbnail

Our offense vs. their defense: Chicago Bears

October 16, 2025
Healey slams shutdown: ‘Washington needs to get back to work.’ thumbnail

Healey slams shutdown: ‘Washington needs to get back to work.’

October 16, 2025
Ayanna Pressley’s Stolen Land Whining: Gripes on Indigenous Day, Keeps Martha’s Vineyard Mansion thumbnail

Ayanna Pressley’s Stolen Land Whining: Gripes on Indigenous Day, Keeps Martha’s Vineyard Mansion

October 16, 2025
Julian Edelman Reveals Locker Room Truth on Deflategate as Tom Brady Gets Compared to Caitlin Clark thumbnail

Julian Edelman Reveals Locker Room Truth on Deflategate as Tom Brady Gets Compared to Caitlin Clark

October 15, 2025
Who was the Saints’ breakout player vs. the Patriots? thumbnail

Who was the Saints’ breakout player vs. the Patriots?

October 15, 2025
The Good, the Bad and the Ugly from the Saints loss to the Patriots thumbnail

The Good, the Bad and the Ugly from the Saints loss to the Patriots

October 15, 2025
Inside Massachusetts’ $247mln crypto ATM scam: ‘Nearly impossible to investigate’ thumbnail

Inside Massachusetts’ $247mln crypto ATM scam: ‘Nearly impossible to investigate’

October 14, 2025
Saints vs. Patriots: Week 6 Open Thread thumbnail

Saints vs. Patriots: Week 6 Open Thread

October 12, 2025
New Orleans Saints vs. New England Patriots Inactives thumbnail

New Orleans Saints vs. New England Patriots Inactives

October 12, 2025
Saints vs. Patriots: Game time, TV, streaming, radio, and odds thumbnail

Saints vs. Patriots: Game time, TV, streaming, radio, and odds

October 12, 2025
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
  • Donate
Sunday, October 19, 2025
66 °f
Wellfleet
58 ° Tue
63 ° Wed
68 ° Thu
61 ° Fri
  • Login
  • Register
FREE Cape Cod News
DONATE
  • FREE Cape Cod News
  • Cape Cod News
  • News
    • News
    • Massachusetts
    • Breaking News
    • Cape Cod Weather
    • Storm Watch
    • Environment
  • Politics
    • democrats
    • republicans
  • Business
    • business
    • cryptocurrency
    • economy
    • money
    • Real Estate
    • Tech
  • World
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Photos
    • Orleans
    • Eastham
    • Wellfleet
    • Truro
    • Provincetown
    • Brewster
    • Chatham
  • Videos
No Result
View All Result
Free Cape Cod News
No Result
View All Result
  • FREE Cape Cod News
  • Cape Cod News
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • World
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Photos
  • Videos
Home News Politics

How falling solar costs have renewed clean hydrogen hopes

FREE Cape Cod News by FREE Cape Cod News
August 10, 2020
in Politics
Reading Time: 6 mins read
Donate
0
How falling solar costs have renewed clean hydrogen hopes thumbnail
634
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on TwitterShare on Facebook

The world is increasingly banking on green hydrogen fuel to fill some of the critical missing pieces in the clean-energy puzzle.

US presidential candidate Joe Biden’s climate plan calls for a research program to produce a clean form of the gas that’s cheap enough to fuel power plants within a decade. Likewise, Japan, South Korea, Australia, New Zealand, and the European Union have all published hydrogen roadmaps that rely on it to accelerate greenhouse gas reductions in the power, transportation, or industrial sectors. Meanwhile, a growing number of companies around the world are building ever larger green hydrogen plants, or exploring its potential to produce steel, create carbon-neutral aviation fuel, or provide a backup power source for server farms.

The attraction is obvious: hydrogen, the most abundant element in the universe, could fuel our vehicles, power our electricity plants, and provide a way to store renewable energy without pumping out the carbon dioxide driving climate change or other pollutants (its only byproduct from cars and trucks is water). But while researchers have trumpeted the promise of a “hydrogen economy” for decades, it’s barely made a dent in fossil fuel demand, and nearly all of it is still produced through a carbon polluting process involving natural gas.

The grand vision of the hydrogen economy has been held back by the high costs of creating a clean version, the massive investments into vehicles, machines and pipes that could be required to put it to use, and progress in competing energy storage alternatives like batteries.

So what’s driving the renewed interest?

For one thing, the economics are rapidly changing. We can produce hydrogen directly by simply splitting water, in a process known as electrolysis, but it’s been prohibitively expensive in large part because it requires a lot of electricity. As the price of solar and wind power continues to rapidly decline, however, it will begin to look far more feasible.

At the same time, as more nations do the hard math on how to achieve their aggressive emissions targets in the coming decades, a green form of hydrogen increasingly seems crucial, says Joan Ogden, director of the sustainable transportation energy pathway program at the University of California, Davis. It’s a flexible tool that could help to clean up an array of sectors where we still don’t have affordable and ready solutions, like aviation, shipping, fertilizer production, and long-duration energy storage for the electricity grid.

Falling renewables costs

For now, however, clean hydrogen is far too expensive in most situations. A recent paper found that relying on solar power to run the electrolyzers that split water can run six times higher than the natural gas process, known as steam methane reforming. 

There are plenty of energy experts who maintain that the added costs and complexities of producing, storing and using a clean version means it will never really take off beyond marginal use cases.

But the good news is that electricity itself makes up a huge share of the cost—upwards of 60% or more—and, again, the costs of renewables are falling fast. Meanwhile, the costs of electrolyzers themselves are projected to decline steeply as manufacturers scale up production, and various research groups develop advanced versions of the technology.

A Nature Energy paper early last year found that if market trends continue, green hydrogen could be economically competitive on an industrial scale within a decade. Similarly, the International Energy Agency projects that the cost of clean hydrogen will fall 30% by 2030.

Voestalpine's H2H2FUTURE green hydrogen plant in Linz, Austria.
Voestalpine’s H2FUTURE green hydrogen plant in Linz, Austria.
VOESTALPINE

Green hydrogen may already be nearly affordable in some places where periods of excess renewable generation drive down the costs of electricity to nearly zero. In a research note last month, Morgan Stanley analysts wrote that locating green hydrogen facilities next to major wind farms in the US Midwest and Texas could make the fuel cost competitive within two years.

A June study from the US National Renewable Energy Laboratory found it may be closer to the middle of the century before hydrogen is the most affordable technology for long duration storage on the grid. But as fluctuating renewables like solar and wind become the dominant source of electricity, utilities will need to store up enough energy to keep the grid reliably working not just for a few hours, but for days and even weeks during certain months when those resources flag.

Hydrogen shines in that scenario compared to other storage technologies, because adding capacity is relatively cheap, says Joshua Eichman, a senior research engineer at the lab and co-author of the study. To increase the length of time that batteries can reliably provide electricity, you need to stack up more and more of them, multiplying the cost of every pricey component within them. With hydrogen, you just need to build a bigger tank, or use a deeper underground cavern, he says.

Putting hydrogen to use

For hydrogen to fully replace carbon-emitting fuels, we’d need to overhaul our infrastructure to distribute, store, and use it. We’d have to produce vehicles and ships with fuel cells that convert hydrogen into electricity, as well as fueling stations along ports and roads. And we’d need to stack up fuel cells or build or retrofit power plants to use the fuel to power the grid directly.

All of which will take a lot of time and money.

But there’s another scenario that sidesteps, or delays, much of this infrastructure overhaul. Once you have hydrogen, it’s relatively simple to combine it with carbon monoxide to produce synthetic versions of the fuels that already power our cars, trucks, ships, and planes. The industrial process to do so is a century old and has been used at various times by petroleum-strapped nations to make fuels from coal or natural gas.

Direct Air Capture pilot plant
Carbon Engineering’s pilot plant in Squamish, British Columbia.
CARBON ENGINEERING

Carbon Engineering, based in Squamish, British Columbia, is developing facilities that capture carbon dioxide from the air. The company plans to combine it with carbon-free hydrogen to make synthetic fuels. The idea is that the fuel will be carbon neutral, emitting no more carbon dioxide than was removed or produced in the process.

In a presentation at a Codex conference late last year, Carbon Engineering founder and Harvard professor David Keith said that falling solar prices should enable them to bring “air-to-fuels” to market for about $1 a liter (around $4 per gallon) in the mid-2020s–and that the price will continue to fall from there.

“The big news here is that this could be done with commodity hardware starting soon,” he said. “You could get to something like a million barrels a day of air-to-fuels synthetic hydrocarbon capacity, I think, soon after 2030, and after that there’s no obvious scaling limit.”

In effect, the process provides a way to convert fleeting, fluctuating solar power into permanently storable fuels that can fill the tanks of any of our machines. “This is about an energy pathway to … deal with the intermittency problem and deal with it in a way that allows you to power high-energy density needs around the world; allows you to fly airplanes across the North Atlantic,” Keith said.

Read More

Tags: bidenenergypoliticssolar

FREE Digital Newspaper Subscription!
Sign up for your free digital subscription. The FREE Cape Cod News

Unsubscribe
FREE Cape Cod News

FREE Cape Cod News

Free Cape Cod News is what's happening in the Cape Cod, U.S and World & what people are talking about right now. Local newspaper. Stay in the know. Subscribe to get notified about our latest news.

Related Posts

New York State Young Republicans put in timeout after racist messages exposed thumbnail
News

New York State Young Republicans put in timeout after racist messages exposed

by FREE Cape Cod News
October 19, 2025
Democrats Stick By Schumer After He Claimed ‘Every Day Gets Better’ During Shutdown thumbnail
Politics

Democrats Stick By Schumer After He Claimed ‘Every Day Gets Better’ During Shutdown

by FREE Cape Cod News
October 11, 2025
7 questions about the government shutdown — answered thumbnail
News

7 questions about the government shutdown — answered

by FREE Cape Cod News
October 3, 2025
Republicans and NJ gov. candidate Jack Ciattarelli hammer Mikie Sherrill over asset gains while in Congress: ’She’s tripled her net worth’ thumbnail
News

Republicans and NJ gov. candidate Jack Ciattarelli hammer Mikie Sherrill over asset gains while in Congress: ’She’s tripled her net worth’

by FREE Cape Cod News
September 24, 2025
Load More
Please login to join discussion

Follow Us on Twitter

FREE Cape Cod News - Your source for local Cape Cod news, latest breaking U.S. and World news. Every day, all day. Subscribe for your favorite categories.

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Businesses compete to battle California’s blackouts thumbnail

Businesses compete to battle California’s blackouts

August 28, 2020
New York State Young Republicans put in timeout after racist messages exposed thumbnail

New York State Young Republicans put in timeout after racist messages exposed

October 19, 2025
Cheering support and instant condemnation: US lawmakers respond to attack on Iran thumbnail

Cheering support and instant condemnation: US lawmakers respond to attack on Iran

June 23, 2025
New York State Young Republicans put in timeout after racist messages exposed thumbnail

New York State Young Republicans put in timeout after racist messages exposed

0
Our offense vs. their defense: Chicago Bears thumbnail

Our offense vs. their defense: Chicago Bears

0
It’s the Governor vs. the Oysterman, and Democrats’ Pick Will Tell Us a Lot About the Party’s Future thumbnail

It’s the Governor vs. the Oysterman, and Democrats’ Pick Will Tell Us a Lot About the Party’s Future

0
New York State Young Republicans put in timeout after racist messages exposed thumbnail

New York State Young Republicans put in timeout after racist messages exposed

October 19, 2025
It’s the Governor vs. the Oysterman, and Democrats’ Pick Will Tell Us a Lot About the Party’s Future thumbnail

It’s the Governor vs. the Oysterman, and Democrats’ Pick Will Tell Us a Lot About the Party’s Future

October 17, 2025
Our offense vs. their defense: Chicago Bears thumbnail

Our offense vs. their defense: Chicago Bears

October 16, 2025

FREE Cape Cod News On Twitter

Today’s News

  • New York State Young Republicans put in timeout after racist messages exposed October 19, 2025
  • It’s the Governor vs. the Oysterman, and Democrats’ Pick Will Tell Us a Lot About the Party’s Future October 17, 2025
  • Our offense vs. their defense: Chicago Bears October 16, 2025
  • Healey slams shutdown: ‘Washington needs to get back to work.’ October 16, 2025
  • Ayanna Pressley’s Stolen Land Whining: Gripes on Indigenous Day, Keeps Martha’s Vineyard Mansion October 16, 2025
FREE Cape Cod News

Copyright © 2024 Free Cape Cod News

Navigate Site

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
  • Donate

Follow Us

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • FREE Cape Cod News
  • Cape Cod News
  • News
    • News
    • Massachusetts
    • Breaking News
    • Cape Cod Weather
    • Storm Watch
    • Environment
  • Politics
    • democrats
    • republicans
  • Business
    • business
    • cryptocurrency
    • economy
    • money
    • Real Estate
    • Tech
  • World
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Photos
    • Orleans
    • Eastham
    • Wellfleet
    • Truro
    • Provincetown
    • Brewster
    • Chatham
  • Videos
  • Login
  • Sign Up

Copyright © 2024 Free Cape Cod News