Hydrogen-based fuels should primarily be used in sectors such as aviation or industrial processes that cannot be electrified, finds a team of researchers.
They state that producing these fuels is too inefficient, costly and their availability too uncertain, to broadly replace fossil fuels for instance in cars or heating houses.
They note that for most sectors, directly using electricity for instance in battery-electric cars or heat pumps makes more economic sense.
The researchers add that universally relying on hydrogen-based fuels and keeping combustion technologies threatens to lock in a further fossil fuel dependency and greenhouse gas emissions.
“Hydrogen-based fuels can be a great clean energy carrier – yet great are also their costs and associated risks,” said lead author Falko Ueckerdt from the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research.
“Fuels based on hydrogen as a universal climate solution might be a bit of false promise. While they’re wonderfully versatile, it should not be expected that they broadly replace fossil fuels. Hydrogen-based fuels will likely be scarce and not competitive for at least another decade. Betting on their wide-ranging use would likely increase fossil fuel dependency: if we cling to combustion technologies and hope to feed them with hydrogen-based fuels, and these turn out to be too costly and scarce, then we will end up further burning oil and gas and emit greenhouse gases. This could endanger short- and long-term climate targets.”
Prioritising to applications like aviation and steel productions
Ueckerdt says that we should hence prioritise those precious hydrogen-based fuels to applications for which they are indispensable: long-distance aviation, feedstocks in chemical production, steel production and potentially some high-temperature industrial processes.
“These are sectors and applications that we can hardly electrify directly,” he said.
The researchers identify a ‘merit-order of hydrogen and e-fuel demand’: a priorisation of where to use these new fuels.
So-called green hydrogen is produced through a process called electrolysis. To crack the stable H2O water molecules into Hydrogen and Oxygen, a lot of electricity is needed. The hydrogen can then be used to synthesise hydrocarbon fuels by adding carbon from CO2. The resulting electro-fuels or e-fuels are easier to store and transport than electricity or pure hydrogen.
“Most importantly, e-fuels can be burned in conventional combustion processes and engines and thus directly substitute fossil fuels,” said Gunnar Luderer, co-author of the paper.
“However, given their limited availability, it would be wrong to think that fossils can be fully replaced this way.”
Driving a car with hydrogen-based fuels needs five times more energy than a battery-electric car
Co-author Romain Sacchi from the Paul Scherrer Institute said: “We are currently far from 100 per cent renewable electricity – so making efficient use of it is key.”
“However, if we use hydrogen-based fuels instead of direct electrification alternatives, two to fourteen times the amount of electricity generation is needed, depending on the application and the respective technologies,” he said.
“Efficiency losses happen both on the supply side, in the production process of the hydrogen-based fuels, and on the demand side – a combustion engine wastes a lot more energy than an electrical one.”
Sacchi said low energy efficiencies cause a fragile climate effectiveness.
“If produced with the current electricity mixes, hydrogen-based fuels would increase – not decrease – greenhouse gas emissions. For the German electricity mix in 2018, using hydrogen-based fuels in cars, trucks or planes would produce about three to four times more greenhouse gas emissions than using fossil fuel,” he said.
In contrast, electric cars or trucks cause greenhouse gas emissions that are comparable to or lower than those of diesel or gasoline cars already based on today’s electricity mixes in most countries, the researchers show based on a full cradle-to-grave life-cycle analysis that also includes the emissions associated with the battery production.
“Only for truly renewable-based power systems do hydrogen-based fuels become an effective means to help stabilise our climate,” said co-author Jordan Everall.
“Hydrogen-based fuels thus clearly require building up loads of additional renewable energy production facilities.”
Greenhouse gas abatement costs of hydrogen-based fuels are currently around 1000 Euro per tonne CO2
Even if assuming 100 per cent renewable electricity, the costs of avoiding one tonne of CO2 emissions by using hydrogen-based fuels would currently be 800 Euro for liquid and 1200 Euro for gaseous fuels, the researchers calculated.
This is much higher than current CO2 prices for instance in the European Emissions Trading Scheme, which currently are below 50 Euro per tonne.
However, if there is continued technological progress driven by CO2 prices as well as subsidies and investments into hydrogen and related industries, by 2050 these CO2 abatement costs could drop to roughly 20 Euro for liquid and 270 Euro for gaseous e-fuels.
Hence, with increasing CO2 prices, hydrogen-based fuels could become cost-competitive probably by 2040. This is too late for those sectors where direct electrification alternatives exist, given the urgency of greenhouse gas emissions reductions to stabilise the climate.
Carbon pricing is needed to make hydrogen-based fuels competitive
Falko Ueckerdt said despite the uncertainties about future costs, hydrogen-based fuels have the potential to become a backstop technology for replacing all remaining fossil fuels around 2040-50.
“However, the realisation hinges on substantial large-scale policy support and in fact subsidies for about two decades before business cases might be secured solely by increasing carbon pricing,” he said.
“An overall policy strategy could rest on two pillars: First, broad technology support to foster innovation and initial scale-up including direct electrification. Second, substantial carbon pricing and an energy tax reform that together create a level-playing field for all technologies and thus a sensible balance between direct and indirect electrification.”
“The long term vision of hydrogen-based fuels is promising,” said Gunnar Luderer.
“Tapping into the huge wind and solar energy potential of the global sun belts, e-fuels can be globally traded and thus resolve renewable energy bottlenecks in densely populated countries such as Japan or in Europe. However, as international and national climate targets require immediate emission reductions, from a climate perspective direct electrification should come first to assure a safe future for all.”
The study is published in Nature Climate Change.
More information: Falko Ueckerdt, Christian Bauer, Alois Dirnaichner, Jordan Everall, Romain Sacchi, Gunnar Luderer (2021): Potential and risks of hydrogen-based e-fuels in climate change mitigation. Nature Climate Change [DOI:10.1038/s41558-021-01032-7]