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Africa key to Europe’s green hydrogen plans, Rystad says

- JOHN BENNY

Africa could be a key supplier of green hydrogen to Europe, which is currently looking to diversify its energy mix following the reduction of natural gas supplies from Russia, Rystad Energy has said.

More than 52 green hydrogen projects have been announced in Africa, with production set to hit 7.2 million tonnes by the end of 2035, the Norway-based consultanc­y said in a report on Wednesday.

Most of the projects will produce ammonia as an end product for export to Europe.

“The global green hydrogen economy is beginning to take shape, with Africa and Europe becoming a dynamo of production and use,” said Rajeev Pandey, a clean technology analyst at Rystad Energy.

“Africa’s unparallel­ed mineral reserves are critical for electrolys­er production and the region’s fantastic renewable potential, combined with Europe’s prodigious production and import targets, will not just alter energy flows – they will create them anew.”

Hydrogen is set to play a key role in the transition to a net-zero energy system and help to decarbonis­e sectors that are difficult to electrify such as heavy industry and long-haul transport.

Blue and grey hydrogen are produced from natural gas while green hydrogen is produced using renewable energy.

Globally, the size of the hydrogen industry is expected to hit $183 billion this year, from $129 billion in 2017, according to Fitch Solutions.

Africa’s overall electrolys­er pipeline currently stands at 114 gigawatts, out of which more than half is linked to countries in sub-Saharan Africa, Rystad said.

Sub-Saharan Africa holds a “highly strategic” position as South Africa sits on about 90 per cent of the world’s reserves of platinum group metals, which are critical for the production of electrolys­ers used to extract green hydrogen, Rystad said.

Investment will be the main obstacle in building these large-scale projects and related infrastruc­ture, it said.

Only 13 megawatts out of the planned 114MW have reached a final investment decision to date, it said. However, European countries have been looking for partnershi­ps in the continent, thanks to its abundant supply of land, low-cost workforce and renewable energy sources.

In December, RWE and Namibia’s Hyphen Hydrogen Energy signed an initial agreement that could help the German utility source up to 300,000 tonnes of green ammonia a year from the African country.

Germany, Europe’s largest economy, aims to import up to 70 per cent of its hydrogen to feed its domestic demand by 2030, with much of it being sourced from Africa.

Last year, the Norwegian Agency for Developmen­t Co-operation said it would provide about $9 million in funding to Scatec, an Oslo-based renewable energy company, to develop green hydrogen projects in Africa.

“These initial moves are set to accelerate as Europe struggles with an ... energy crisis and seeks new partners,” Rystad said.

Last month, the EU launched the Green Deal Industrial Plan to boost the “competitiv­eness” of Europe’s net-zero industry and support the fast transition to climate neutrality.

The programme, which followed America’s Inflation Reduction Act, seeks to promote renewable energy and green hydrogen projects across Africa, amid plans to sign agreements to expand global and regional investment­s, Rystad said.

Egypt, the Arab world’s third-largest economy, tops the list of Africa’s green hydrogen producers, with 21 projects in the pipeline.

 ?? Bloomberg ?? A hydrogen plant in Spain. Europe is looking to diversify its energy mix
Bloomberg A hydrogen plant in Spain. Europe is looking to diversify its energy mix

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