The National - News

Acwa Power plans to repeat $5bn Neom green hydrogen project abroad

- JOHN BENNY

Acwa Power, which is developing a $5 billion green hydrogen-based ammonia production plant in Saudi Arabia’s futuristic city Neom, plans to “replicate” the project elsewhere, a senior executive said.

Huge capacities of the fuel are required to meet an anticipate­d growth in demand, Andrea Lovato, global head of hydrogen at Acwa Power, told The National at the CEBC Annual Summit in Dubai.

In 2020, Acwa Power signed a $5 billion agreement with US-based Air Products and Neom to build the “world’s largest” green hydrogen-based ammonia production centre in the kingdom’s $500 billion city. The green hydrogen scheme at Neom will use 4 gigawatts of renewable power from solar, wind and storage to produce 650 tonnes a day of hydrogen from electrolys­is, using technology supplied by German company Thyssenkru­pp, the companies said at the time.

The project, expected to come on stream in 2025, will produce about 1.2 million tonnes of green ammonia a year.

Last year, Acwa Power again teamed up with Air Products and Oman’s OQ energy company to create a multibilli­on-dollar green hydrogen-based ammonia production unit in Oman’s Salalah Free Zone.

In October, the company also joined forces with the Industrial Developmen­t Corporatio­n of South Africa, a finance institutio­n, to develop projects on green hydrogen and its derivative­s worth $10 billion in Africa’s secondlarg­est economy.

Acwa Power also teamed up with Posco Holdings, the holding company of South Korea’s Posco Group, in July last year, to develop green hydrogen.

The entities will also develop green hydrogen derivative­s, such as green ammonia, to decarbonis­e Posco’s power generation and steel making processes, they said at the time.

Globally, 520 million tonnes of hydrogen will be needed to achieve net-zero targets by 2050, the Internatio­nal Energy Agency said.

French investment bank Natixis estimates that investment in hydrogen will exceed $300 billion by 2030. “To [build] all this capacity, you need a lot of equipment and electrolys­ers and that will be the bottleneck … in a time everybody is investing in [hydrogen]” Mr Lovato said.

Hydrogen, which is produced from renewable energy and natural gas, is expected to become a critical fuel as economies and industries turn to a low-carbon world.

It comes in various forms, including blue, green and grey. Blue and grey hydrogen are produced from natural gas.

The production of green hydrogen, obtained by electrolys­is of water, will require trillions of dollars in investment along with increasing co-operation with countries where renewable energy is available, said Mr Lovato.

The Middle East, rich in renewable energy sources, has high potential when it comes to green hydrogen production, given the rising investment in infrastruc­ture and the presence of global industry suppliers, he said.

Mr Lovato expects hydrogen to be traded in the market in the next seven to 10 years as more capacity comes online.

The hydrogen market is evolving similar to the liquefied natural gas market, with large projects and long-term off-take agreements, he said.

But a crude oil-style “liquid market” for the clean fuel could emerge in the next decade, Mr Lovato said.

Last year, the Internatio­nal Renewable Energy Agency said that members of the Group of Seven advanced economies could be front runners in green hydrogen, but warned that overuse of the fuel could slow the energy transition.

The fuel will grow alongside renewables amid increasing demand in hard-to-abate sectors such as steel and aluminium, Mr Lovato said.

 ?? ?? Andrea Lovato, global head of hydrogen at Acwa Power
Andrea Lovato, global head of hydrogen at Acwa Power

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