1.5° PATHWAYS

Page 234

WORLD ENERGY TRANSITIONS OUTLOOK

5.3 SPECIAL FOCUS: INTERNATIONAL TRADE OF HYDROGEN AND DERIVATIVES Green hydrogen production can provide flexibility to the power sector through price-responsive electrolysers and the storage of hydrogen to follow the seasonality of renewable resources. To balance renewables internationally, in addition to cross-border electricity exchange, international trade of hydrogen can provide an opportunity to link low-cost renewable resources with demand centres, increasing the distance renewable energy can be transported compared with electricity. Although such trade is possible, hydrogen markets are expected to be regional to a large extent and much smaller than today’s oil and gas sectors. Hydrogen trade can offer multiple opportunities for some countries: • It can turn countries that have vast good-quality resources and import energy today into future exporters. • It can provide diversification and sustainable alternatives to oil and gas. • It can lead to a technology race in electrolysis and fuel cells. • It can improve the energy security of importers by providing an alternative carrier with access to a more diversified mix of suppliers. These prospects are leading to new hydrogen diplomacy, especially by countries that have limited renewable potential, such as Germany and Japan (IRENA, 2022f). Global hydrogen demand could increase by a factor of almost seven by 2050, to reach 74 EJ in IRENA’s 1.5°C Scenario – a large increase but still just a fraction of global energy consumption (Figure 5.10). Reaching that figure will require an accelerated pace of renewable capacity deployment, although some fossil fuel-based hydrogen could be substituted for renewablesbased hydrogen. Two-thirds of the hydrogen supply is expected to be from renewable hydrogen and one-third from fossil fuel-based carbon capture and storage.

234


Articles inside

References

36min
pages 334-349

7.6 Case study: The European Union

2min
pages 332-333

Annex

3min
pages 350-352

7.5 Risk mitigation of supply shortages

9min
pages 325-331

7.2 What are critical materials?

1min
page 295

6.4 Availability of sustainable biomass feedstocks

12min
pages 274-281

6.5 Biomass sustainability

14min
pages 282-289

7.1 The role of critical materials in the energy transition

4min
pages 293-294

6.1 Introduction

1min
page 245

6.3 Scaling up bioenergy use in key applications: Opportunities, barriers and policies

29min
pages 258-273

5.3 Special focus: International trade of hydrogen and derivatives

14min
pages 234-241

5.1 Power system flexibility 5.2 Electrification of end-use

16min
pages 196-206

CHALLENGE

2min
pages 30-31

4.2 Priority action areas to scale up progress

41min
pages 165-189

Introduction

4min
pages 28-29

3.2 Policy baskets for a sensitivity analysis

16min
pages 121-129

3.1 Introduction

8min
pages 114-120

2.9 Policies for a just energy transition

8min
pages 108-111

Acknowledgements

1min
page 3

1.1 Introduction

1min
page 32
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.