National Post (National Edition)

ALBERTA COULD EMERGE AS CANADA'S FIRST HYDROGEN ENERGY HUB, SAYS REPORT

$100-billion opportunit­y for province

- GEOFFREY MORGAN

CALGARY• Alberta’ s hydro carbon-based economy could be retooled to capture a $100-billion-per-year market in hydrogen-based energy and diversify the provincial government’s revenues away from oil and gas, according to a new report.

An industrial corridor known as Alberta’s Industrial Heartland north of Edmonton has the potential to be Canada’s first hydrogen production hub as Canada “is strategica­lly positioned to benefit from taking a leadership role in the transition to a net-zero hydrogen economy,” according to a report released Monday by University of Calgary researcher­s and the Transition Accelerato­r, a think-tank funded by multiple family foundation­s and government­s, including the Alberta government.

“The region’s low cost for natural gas, technical expertise and ability to rapidly scale-up the production of blue (hydrogen) makes it possible to not only decarboniz­e industrial processes that use (hydrogen) but also create new fuel markets with up to 90 per cent lower lifecycle GHG emissions,” the report notes.

Australia, China, Germany, Saudi Arabia, South Korea and the United Kingdom are pursuing hydrogen strategies to reduce carbon emissions because hydrogen produces water vapour rather than CO2 when it combusts in combinatio­n with oxygen.

Both the Canadian and Alberta government­s are keen to encourage the growth of a hydrogen industry. Alberta also identified hydrogen as an important plank in its long-term natural gas strategy unveiled in October and has funded a handful of small hydrogen demonstrat­ion projects in the province.

Altogether, the report released Monday expects the domestic and internatio­nal hydrogen markets have the potential to be worth “$100 billion per year or more.”

The report highlights five facilities immediatel­y north of Edmonton that produce hydrogen, including Shell

Canada Ltd.’s Scotford refining complex, the NorthWest Refinery and a Nutrien Ltd. fertilizer plant.

In total, the province produces 2,250 tonnes of hydrogen per day from hydrocarbo­ns such as oil and gas. Of that total, roughly 937 tonnes per day can be considered “blue hydrogen,” meaning the process uses a carbon-capture system to reduce emissions. Green hydrogen, meanwhile, is produced using renewable energy to electrolyz­e water.

The rest of the hydrogen produced in Alberta is considered “gray hydrogen,” because the CO2 emissions associated with its production are not captured.

“We already have a good hydrogen economy in Alberta. It’s an industrial economy. We make hydrogen and we use it to make fertilizer,” said Dan Wicklum, the Calgary-based CEO of Transition Accelerato­r.

Wicklum said government­s previously tried to reduce emissions by mandating certain sectors reduce their emissions to targeted levels either through regulation or taxation, but a hydrogen-based energy system could enable countries

around the world to set and meet net-zero carbon targets.

Despite the potential for Alberta and Canada to be a hydrogen supplier, internatio­nal competitor­s are already moving into the market.

“Our competitor­s so far are Australia and Saudi Arabia,” Wicklum said, noting that both countries have already export cargoes of hydrogen to buyers in Japan and the Canadian industry will need to catch up.

In September, Saudi Arabia sent a shipment of blue hydrogen to Japan, said to be the world’s first shipment of the energy source.

The province’s abundance of natural gas will make the province the second cheapest supplier of hydrogen in the world, after Russia, Alberta’s Associate Minister of

Natural Gas Dale Nally said in an interview Monday.

Nally said there are multiple projects in Western Canada that could allow Alberta to grow its hydrogen production, including two fully permitted pipelines that had been planned to connect natural gas fields with LNG export projects that could be repurposed to export hydrogen.

“It has the potential in terms of jobs and royalties to be a game changer for Albertans,” Nally said of hydrogen, adding that he expects the province’s oil and gas industry to continue to be a driver of economic growth.

“We have a multi-generation­al supply of cheap natural gas. We have a skilled workforce with experience in the oil and gas industry. We are equipped to pick up the ball and run with it,” Nally

said.

The province has helped fund a handful of hydrogen-based pilot projects, including for the use of longhaul trucks between Calgary and Edmonton as the transporta­tion industry is looking to decarboniz­e and considers hydrogen fuel a viable alternativ­e.

Indeed, government­s around the world have been moving to ban the sale of gasoline and diesel vehicles, including in California and the United Kingdom.

On Monday, Quebec Premier Francois Legault unveiled a $6.7 billion environmen­tal plan that includes banning the sale of new gasoline-burning vehicles by 2035 as part of its goal to reduce emissions and meet Paris climate targets.

 ?? ED KAISER / POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES ?? Shell Canada Ltd.'s Scotford refining complex is one of five industrial plants
just north of Edmonton that produce hydrogen.
ED KAISER / POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES Shell Canada Ltd.'s Scotford refining complex is one of five industrial plants just north of Edmonton that produce hydrogen.

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