BusinessMirror

China wants to corner another green energy market: Hydrogen

- BY DAVID R. BAKER & WILL MATHIS With assistance from Luz Ding/bloomberg.

ADECADE ago, China used low prices to dominate solar manufactur­ing, wiping out Western competitor­s just as worldwide demand for panels started to soar. The US and Europe are determined not to let the same thing happen with hydrogen.

As the world sprints to decarboniz­e, the next round of competitio­n revolves around a device called an electrolyz­er. Plug these into clean electricit­y such as solar power, and it’s possible to extract hydrogen from water without producing any planet-warming emissions. That’s a crucial step in creating a green fuel capable of decarboniz­ing such industries as steel, cement or shipping.

Companies around the world are already revving up electrolyz­er production, green hydrogen plants are under constructi­on, and the industry is finally making the leap from pilot projects to industrial scale. BloombergN­EF, a clean energy research group, estimates worldwide electrolyz­er production will need to grow 91 times by 2030 to meet demand. But many Western clean tech veterans eye the emerging competitio­n with a queasy feeling of déjà vu. More than 40 percent of all electrolyz­ers made today come from China, according to BNEF.

Chinese electrolyz­ers aren’t as efficient as those made in the US and Europe, but they cost far less— about a quarter of what Western companies charge. Chinese electrolyz­er companies still largely serve their domestic market, but they’re starting to expand sales overseas.

“I’ve heard too many government officials say we cannot repeat the experience of solar again,” said BNEF hydrogen analyst Xiaoting Wang.

President Joe Biden served as vice president during the crucial years when China seized the lead in solar manufactur­ing. Now he views China as a competitor more than a supplier, and he has made bringing clean tech manufactur­ing back to the US a pillar of his climate policies. The US is determined not to let China control this new energy boom, and Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act showers money on domestic hydrogen production.

“The reality is, the US is going to give very generous subsidies to ensure that local suppliers survive,” Wang said.

Europe has its own reasons for wanting a piece of this nascent industry.

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has driven home the value of fuel that can be produced within Europe, and it has ramped up the continent’s ambitions for hydrogen. And yet, some hydrogen advocates say the European Union isn’t following through, putting it at a disadvanta­ge to both the US and China. The union has set a target for green hydrogen production—10 million tons per year by 2030 — but has not yet decided which methods will qualify as “green.” That makes it hard for companies to commit to the big hydrogen production projects that would drive electrolyz­er orders.

“I’m scared the market shares in the electrolyz­er business will be taken away from Europe and shipped to other geographie­s,” said Jorgo Chatzimark­akis, chief executive officer of the Brussels-based lobbying group Hydrogen Europe. “The EU are shooting themselves in the head. Not in the foot—in the head.”

Meanwhile, many analysts expect the efficiency of Chinese electrolyz­ers to improve, eroding any technologi­cal advantage US and European companies now have.

“I have no doubt that China is working on better electrolyz­ers,” said Bridget van Dorsten, senior hydrogen analyst at the Wood Mackenzie research and consulting firm. “The day that China decides not to be a laggard anymore is the day they aren’t a laggard anymore.”

And some Chinese companies have a head start. Chemical-equipment manufactur­ers there have made electrolyz­ers for years, installing large-scale water electrolys­is systems for various manufactur­ing industries such as polysilico­n production for solar cells.

Electrolyz­ers use electricit­y to split water into hydrogen and oxygen, and versions of them have been on the market since the 1920s. Many countries now see hydrogen as the best bet for decarboniz­ing industries that can’t easily run on electricit­y. If an electrolyz­er’s power comes from a solar or wind facility, or a nuclear reactor, the process of producing the hydrogen is also carbon-free.

The devices come in several varieties, each with its pros and cons. Chinese companies mostly produce “alkaline” electrolyz­ers that have low up-front costs but need more electricit­y than competing technologi­es to yield each kilogram of hydrogen. US and European companies focus on “solid oxide” and “protonexch­ange membrane” (PEM) electrolyz­ers that have a higher initial cost but need less electricit­y—a big selling point in places where electricit­y is expensive.

Chinese manufactur­ers, however, are developing PEM electrolyz­ers and refining their alkaline products. And they’re eying foreign markets for growth.

Xi’an-based Longi Green Energy Technology Co., the world’s largest solar equipment maker, set up a hydrogen unit in March 2021 and has already built 1.5 gigawatts of electrolyz­er manufactur­ing capacity in China. It’s developing PEM but predicts that alkaline electrolyz­ers will dominate the industry for the next five years, said Wang Yingge, vice president of Longi Hydrogen. Within three years, the company expects foreign markets to make up more than half of its sales, he said.

“Europe and the US have the most proactive incentive policies for the hydrogen industry, while the Middle East and Africa have the largest scale and most economical renewable energy,” Wang said. “Green hydrogen projects in these regions have good profitabil­ity.”

Meanwhile, state-owned PERIC received orders in 2022 from seven foreign countries, including Australia, the US and Korea, according to BNEF. Shandong Saikesaisi Hydrogen Energy, one of the few Chinese manufactur­ers to specialize in PEM, now gets about 10 percent to 15 percent of its sales from overseas, said Huang Fang, a project director of the company. It’s aiming to improve that percentage amid demand from Europe and Australia, Huang said.

While the electrolyz­er is as essential to green hydrogen as the solar cell is to solar power, there are key difference­s.

Solar panels are essentiall­y an off-the-shelf technology. Whether they’re set up on a rooftop or assembled in a giant desert array, the panels and the systems connected to them don’t vary all that much. That’s not the case with hydrogen production. Electrolyz­ers are just one part of a hydrogen production plant whose size and design will be dictated by its energy source and customer needs. Plug Power Inc. is building a fleet of green hydrogen production plants in the US, and each is unique, said Chief Executive Officer Andy Marsh.

“The plant in Texas is different from the plant in New York, which is different from the plant in Georgia,” he said. “It’s all very local.” Plug, based in Latham, New York, also makes and sells PEM electrolyz­ers.

There are advantages to making electrolyz­ers within the market they’re intended to serve. Belgium’s John Cockerill Group establishe­d a joint venture in China—cockerill Jingli Hydrogen— to make electrolyz­ers for China, rather than for other countries. The company is also investing in two factories in Europe as well as potentiall­y the US and India.

The equipment is complex and heavy, requiring significan­t on-site customizat­ion for each customer, said Raphaël Tilot, Cockerill’s head of hydrogen. “Transporti­ng this from China to other parts of the world isn’t that straightfo­rward,” he said. “The level of on-site work to make it compatible with the client’s project is quite significan­t.”

While China’s solar industry enjoyed years of generous subsidies from the central government, which helped equipment makers dominate the global supply chain, hydrogen has yet to see the same level of policy support. The country introduced its first state-level plan for hydrogen developmen­t early last year, but refrained from institutin­g any financial support policies such as subsidies, crushing hopes from equipment manufactur­ers.

Meanwhile Roeland Baan, chief executive officer of Denmark’s Topsoe A/S, said the American incentive system is now easier to navigate than the EU’S. His company is developing a 500-megawatt factory to produce solid-oxide electrolyz­ers, which operate at high temperatur­es and are more efficient than alkaline or PEM. “We decided to put our plant in Denmark,” Baan said. “For the second plant, we’ll have to see. It might definitely be in the US.”

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