Houston Chronicle Sunday

FUELING NEW PATH

U.K. plans subsidydri­ven hydrogen in net-zero goals.

- By Alex Morales and Rachel Morison

Hydrogen could be vital to U.K. efforts to eliminate greenhouse gases by changing the way vehicles are fueled, factories are powered and homes are heated.

Business Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng on Tuesday unveiled a strategy that aims to unlock 4 billion pounds ($5.5 billion) of investment in hydrogen production by 2030, supporting 9,000 jobs. Ministers are planning to use similar incentives to those that helped boost offshore wind production.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson is under pressure to show how his government will cut emissions to net zero by 2050 after announcing a series of ambitious goals to slash greenhouse gases, without outlining policies to get there. Government analysis suggests hydrogen could help provide as much as 35 percent of U.K. energy consumptio­n by 2050, meaning it could be pivotal.

“Hydrogen is potentiall­y crucially important,” Kwarteng said in an interview. “It can solve a lot of our decarboniz­ation problems.”

Kwarteng said its use in transport could help decarboniz­e trains, trucks and bus fleets. Hydrogen could also generate the power for refineries and steel plants, he said, and longer term it could play a big part in heating the nation’s homes.

Carbon capture

The U.K. is due to host a major round of United Nations climate talks in Glasgow in November, where Johnson will need to demonstrat­e leadership if he hopes to persuade other polluters to reduce their emissions.

While the published strategy makes no advance on the government’s existing target of producing 5 gigawatts of low-carbon hydrogen by 2030, it does begin to flesh out how ministers want to get there.

The plan includes both “green hydrogen” — produced using water and renewable power — and cheaper “blue hydrogen,” which has carbon dioxide as a byproduct that needs to be stored permanentl­y undergroun­d. Amid concerns about the environmen­tal integrity of the latter, Kwarteng’s department is consulting on an industry standard to ensure minimal carbon leakage.

The minister said pursuing both production methods is vital to help stimulate a new market, which would be much harder to do relying solely on green hydrogen at about twice the cost.

The government will make sure blue hydrogen that’s subsidized “is as pure as we

can, as decarboniz­ed as we can,” he said.

But environmen­tal groups criticized the dual approach. Greenpeace called it a “bad idea both environmen­tally and economical­ly,” while E3G said it could be a “twin track to nowhere, leaving the climate behind.”

The government wants to use so-called contracts-fordiffere­nce to incentiviz­e hydrogen production. Since they were introduced for offshore wind in 2015, annual power generation has tripled while costs have come down by two-thirds.

For hydrogen, the government aims initially to negotiate contracts directly with hydrogen producers, at a level that covers their costs and allows them to make a profit. Then, it aims to move on to a system of competitiv­e auctions, as happened with renewable energy in the past decade. Ministers haven’t decided whether it will be paid for from general taxation or consumer levies.

The U.K. plans to finalize the low-carbon hydrogen business model next year with an aim to allocate the first contracts in the first quarter of 2023.

The plan doesn’t model costs for hydrogen production from nuclear power plants, but does envision a role for existing reactors to power electrolyz­ers this decade.

The role for nuclear power to produce hydrogen could be expanded after 2030.

Heating homes

The strategy sees industrial processes forming the bulk of hydrogen demand over the next decade. The government expects smaller take-up in the power sector and for transporta­tion.

It also plans domestic heating trials at the scale of neighborho­ods, villages and towns this decade to lay the foundation­s for wider post-2030 usage.

“If you consider that 85 percent of U.K. homes essentiall­y use gas, we could decarboniz­e this essentiall­y through use of hydrogen,” Kwarteng said. “That’s very exciting.”

Hydrogen is seen as the main alternativ­e to heat pumps when replacing the gas-fired boilers that warm the majority of U.K. homes.

The industry sees the potential to blend hydrogen with natural gas to a proportion of up to 20 percent without the need to modify pipes or home appliances — an option the government said it’s looking at. That could give ministers an easy way to quickly reduce emissions from home heating and cooking, opening the way for the hydrogen industry to increase that blend over time.

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 ?? Suzie Howell / New York Times ?? Wind turbines off the coast of England. The U.K. plans subsidies for hydrogen similar to those used for offshore wind.
Suzie Howell / New York Times Wind turbines off the coast of England. The U.K. plans subsidies for hydrogen similar to those used for offshore wind.

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