The National - News

Hydrogen vehicle strategy to help UAE achieve clean energy ambitions

- JENNIFER GNANA

Public transport in the UAE is likely to undergo an overhaul after the Cabinet’s approval of a national system for vehicles running on the alternativ­e fuel – a move that is expected to help the country achieve new clean energy targets.

On Sunday, the UAE Cabinet approved a nationwide system for hydrogen vehicles, as the country ramps up production of blue and green variants of the fuel.

Blue hydrogen is manufactur­ed from natural gas, while green hydrogen refers to the fuel produced from clean energy sources.

In terms of having an impact on the local economy, “captive fleets of vehicles” from passenger cars to heavy duty trucks that have easy access to refuelling stations could benefit from the approval of a hydrogen vehicle system, said Antoine Trieux, managinbg director and an infrastruc­ture and energy industry banker at Natixis.

“This includes taxi fleets, buses, vehicles in ports/airports, garbage trucks [and] delivery trucks,” he added.

Globally, the hydrogen industry is expected to grow to $183 billion by 2023, from $129bn in 2017, according to Fitch Solutions. The research agency anticipate­s eager involvemen­t in hydrogen uptake for transport.

The UAE has made significan­t moves to scale up its hydrogen economy, including the formation of an alliance between the Abu Dhabi National Oil Company, Mubadala and ADQ, an industrial holding company.

Yesterday, Mubadala and Italy’s Snam signed an agreement to collaborat­e on “joint investment and developmen­t” of hydrogen.

The companies will carry out a series of technical and economic feasibilit­y studies to develop “a hydrogen economy for the UAE”, said Musabbeh Al Kaabi, chief executive of UAE Investment­s at Mubadala Investment Company. Ivano Iannelli, executive director at the Green Economy Foundation, said there were parallels between the speed with which the UAE is progressin­g its hydrogen agenda and the manner in which it developed solar energy.

“In terms of hydrogen, they’re not looking at an isolated component of the value chain, but they are taking the entire marketplac­e at once ... so they’re looking at manufactur­ing, production, distributi­on [and] utilisatio­n,” he said.

Sunday’s Cabinet meeting also gave the green light to a national energy and water demand management programme, which is aiming for a 40 per cent increase in efficiency for the three most energy-intensive sectors of the economy – transport, industry and constructi­on.

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