San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

FUEL OF THE FUTURE Hydrogen’s versatilit­y makes it a favored option in a clean energy landscape, from transporta­tion to storage

- BY ROB NIKOLEWSKI

“You’ll see it as a transporta­tion fuel, as a home fuel, as an industrial fuel. You’ll see it in all of these places over time and 50 years from now, I think it will be very common across all those sectors.” Dave Edwards • hydrogen energy advocate who works for the U.S. arm of the French multinatio­nal Air Liquide

Go back to chemistry class. Remember hydrogen? It’s the simplest element on earth, consisting of one proton and one electron. Well, humble hydrogen has suddenly become the hottest topic in energy circles around the globe. That’s because hydrogen’s simplicity and versatilit­y can be applied to reduce greenhouse gas emissions across an ever-growing number of manufactur­ing and power segments, while also advancing the adoption and distributi­on of renewable energy.

The relatively high cost of adding hydrogen into the value chain has some skeptics questionin­g just how extensive its role will be, but supporters say economies of scale — combined with a lot of government spending — will lead to an energy system at least partially infused with hydrogen.

“It’s just starting to get the attention of people like investors and other industrial players,” said Dave Edwards, a hydrogen energy advocate who works for the U.S. arm of the French multinatio­nal Air Liquide. “The average citizen doesn’t think of hydrogen in their energy future yet, although it absolutely will be playing a role.”

Unlike, say, natural gas or solar generation, hydrogen is not a source of energy. Rather, it is an energy carrier that can store and deliver usable energy.

When mixed with oxygen in a fuel cell, hydrogen burns clean. And, crucially, the element can be applied across a variety of sectors.

For example, manufactur­ing industries such as steel and cement require tremendous amounts of heat to make their products. Hydrogen can burn hot enough to run a blast furnace. The element can be injected into the natural gas that is used as a feedstock at those factories, resulting in a smaller carbon footprint.

Hydrogen can also be applied to help decarboniz­e the transporta­tion sector, which accounts for more than half of California’s carbon pollution.

A hydrogen fuel cell vehicle combines hydrogen and oxygen to produce electricit­y, which runs a motor. To fuel the car, a driver pulls up to a pump similar to a convention­al gasoline station and pumps hydrogen into the tank. It takes

about three to five minutes to fill up and the only emissions are a few drops of water that come out of the tailpipe.

About 9,000 hydrogen fuel cell passenger vehicles — such as the Toyota Mirai and the Honda Clarity — are on the roads in California, and state policymake­rs want to go from about 40 hydrogen fueling stations currently in use across the state to 200 in the next four years.

But with the electric vehicle segment making strides, a more immediate opportunit­y for hydrogen may be found in larger vehicles. Buses and medium- and heavy-duty trucks powered by fuel cells don’t need the heavier battery systems required in electric vehicles and they perform well in cold weather. Hydrogen fuel cells can also be used to power forklifts and movers at sites like warehouses, shipping sites and ports, replacing gasoline and diesel.

Energy storage

Hydrogen is also seen as a spur to develop energy storage sites.

Solar production in California is plentiful during the day when the sun is out but disappears after the sun sets.

When there is an oversupply of solar during the day, grid managers sometimes have to curtail solar generation or send the excess to neighborin­g states.

Energy storage systems save up the excess generation and then discharge the electricit­y when demand is high on the grid, such as between 4 p.m. and 9 p.m. when power is more expensive.

Battery storage helps but it is designed to be used on a short-term, hour-to-hour, basis. Hydrogen, however, can store energy for months at a time.

“If you want to store electricit­y for a long period of time, battery storage gets more and expensive,” Paul Browning, CEO of Mitsubishi Hitachi Power Systems Americas, told CNBC. “Whereas with hydrogen, we can store it undergroun­d in large salt domes for long periods of time at very low cost.”

That’s exactly what Mitsubishi is doing with fuel storage company Magnum Developmen­t, at a power station in Delta, Utah, that’s operated by the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power. The stored electricit­y will be discharged to power gas turbines at the power plant.

When the project starts in 2025, Browning said the turbines will use 30 percent hydrogen and 70 natural gas instead of coal. By 2045, the plan is to use 100 percent hydrogen, fed by renewable sources.

Hydrogen also can be applied to residentia­l and commercial power. Work is being done to blend the element into the natural gas transmissi­on and distributi­on system.

Combined Heat and Power, or CHP, systems can lead to 35 percent to 50 percent reductions in emissions by convention­al means and the U.S. Department of Energy has estimated reductions of more than 80 percent if hydrogen from low- or zero-carbon sources is used in a fuel cell.

How do you make it?

Since hydrogen does not typically exist by itself, it must be produced from compounds that contain it. The element can be produced using a wide range of resources that use different production methods.

Given the emphasis policymake­rs have placed on clean energy, most of the attention has focused on making “blue hydrogen” and “green hydrogen.”

In blue hydrogen, natural gas — which contains hydrogen as part of natural gas’s methane compound — is commonly put into a steam methane reformer. The reformer isolates the hydrogen but leaves behind carbon dioxide, or CO2. Since CO2 is a greenhouse gas, it is then captured and stored instead of getting released into the atmosphere. It’s estimated the process could cut the amount of carbon produced in half.

In green hydrogen, the element is produced using renewable energy sources, such as wind, solar, hydropower or even biomass. One process getting substantia­l attention is electrolys­is, in which electricit­y from carbon-free sources is sent into an electrolyz­er and water — made up of hydrogen and oxygen, H2O — is pumped into it. Out comes hydrogen and no carbon emissions are released, hence the term “green hydrogen.”

Hurdles and promoters

But the process used to produce hydrogen is expensive and the cleaner the version, the more costly it gets. Hydrogen now accounts for less than 5 percent of the world’s energy supply, so to build and expand its reach will be expensive.

Keen to meet its climate goal of reducing greenhouse gas emissions 55 percent by 2030, the European Union has taken the early lead in promoting hydrogen. Last summer, the EU produced a roadmap that called for spending up to $569 billion (470 billion euros) in green hydrogen investment­s by 2050.

President Joe Biden’s $2 trillion plan to tackle climate change includes hydrogen but no specific dollar figure was attached to it in his clean energy proposal that was released on the campaign trail.

Hydrogen’s advocates are counting on costs coming down as the hydrogen becomes more ubiquitous — similar to the economies of scale that have led to steep declines in the costs of solar, wind and batteries. There are certainly no guarantees that hydrogen can duplicate that, but analysts at IHS Markit have predicted the production of green hydrogen could become cost competitiv­e in nine years.

On the infrastruc­ture side, there are issues with hydrogen’s compatibil­ity with existing pipes in the natural gas system. When exposed to hydrogen over time, some types of steel pipes can become brittle and crack.

San Diego Gas & Electric and Southern California Gas have partnered with the National Fuel Cell Research Center at UC Irvine on a blending program in which hydrogen will be injected into plastic pipes to see how it performs. The initial blend level will be 1 percent and may increase to 20 percent.

“Steel pipes don’t do well; plastic does a lot better,” said Kevin Sagara, group president at Sempra Energy, the parent company of SDG&E and Socalgas. “So we’ll start with plastic, see how that goes and then slowly scale it up to other types of pipe.”

The program is one of seven hydrogen projects Sempra companies are taking part in. Earlier this month, Socalgas announced it will spend $1.3 million to fund the developmen­t of hydrogen refueling stations at ports and fuel cells for marine vessels and locomotive­s.

California recently set a mandate to derive 100 percent of its electricit­y from carbon-free sources by 2045 but even though Sempra touts owning the largest natural gas franchise in the Western Hemisphere, Sagara said the Fortune 500 company is “all in” on hydrogen.

“We want to lead in this area,” Sagara said. “Our grid will be the backbone for not only continuing this path of electrific­ation but then delivering renewable electricit­y to make the clean molecules like hydrogen to decarboniz­e those other sectors” of the energy economy.

Ever versatile, hydrogen can also be liquefied, which can play into the millions of dollars Sempra has invested in liquefied natural gas, or LNG, facilities. “You could see a big hydrogen hub down in the Gulf by Texas, where there’s ample storage, lots of low-cost renewables — both solar and wind,” Sagara said. “It’s one of the best places to make hydrogen.”

Hydrogen skeptics

Talk like that riles Matt Vespa, staff attorney of the environmen­tal group Earthjusti­ce, who says fossil fuel companies are latching onto hydrogen as a lifeline.

“I think there’s this broader play by the gas industry to suggest there’s some Holy Grail that will allow us to keep the gas system running as it currently does, just with a different fuel,” Vespa said.

For one, he’s very skeptical that hydrogen can be safely injected into gas pipelines to a degree where it makes a substantia­l environmen­tal improvemen­t. “There’s really not a lot you could do with existing pipeline structure without having to completely replace the pipelines and appliances that currently run on gas,” Vespa said.

Many environmen­talists want resources spent on green hydrogen projects that use electrolyz­ers, not on blue hydrogen that uses natural gas or other fossil fuels as a feedstock.

“Let’s concentrat­e on that and also target the applicatio­ns where (hydrogen) has the most greenhouse gas benefit,” Vespa said.

At the California Legislatur­e, Sen. Nancy Skinner, Dberkeley, has introduced Senate Bill 18 that would direct state agencies to designate green hydrogen as a key energy source for all renewable power uses and longterm storage to help propel investment and technology.

When she introduced the bill, Skinner called hydrogen “the only renewable energy source that has the potential to decarboniz­e all aspects of our economy. To put it simply: We might not get to a carbon-free world without it.”

Globally, investment­s in hydrogen are expected to grow to more than $700 million in the next two years and hardly a week goes by without news of another hydrogen investment, initiative or research program.

Air Liquide, which has been in the hydrogen business for 50 years, is constructi­ng a $150 million plant near Las Vegas that will turn biogas from organic waste into hydrogen and then sell it in California to power hydrogen fuel cell vehicles, forklifts, as well as other applicatio­ns.

Last month, the company announced plans to build the world’s largest electrolyz­er, using hydroelect­ricity in Quebec to produce hydrogen.

“Does hydrogen ever fully replace gasoline, diesel and natural gas? It’ll play its part in replacing those, without a doubt,” said Edwards of Air Liquide. “You’ll see it as a transporta­tion fuel, as a home fuel, as an industrial fuel. You’ll see it in all of these places over time and 50 years from now, I think it will be very common across all those sectors.”

rob.nikolewski@sduniontri­bune.com Twitter: @robnikolew­ski

 ?? CHRIS RATCLIFFE BLOOMBERG ??
CHRIS RATCLIFFE BLOOMBERG
 ?? LUIS SINCO LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? The Intermount­ain Power Plant in Delta, Utah, plans to use 30 percent hydrogen by 2025 and 100 percent hydrogen by 2045.
LUIS SINCO LOS ANGELES TIMES The Intermount­ain Power Plant in Delta, Utah, plans to use 30 percent hydrogen by 2025 and 100 percent hydrogen by 2045.

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