April 20, 2024
Journal Article

Supply and demand drivers of global hydrogen deployment in the transition towards a decarbonized energy system

Abstract

The role of hydrogen in energy system decarbonization is being actively examined by the research and policy communities. We evaluate the potential ‘hydrogen economy’ in global climate change mitigation scenarios using the Global Change Analysis Model (GCAM). We consider major hydrogen production methods in conjunction with delivery options to understand how hydrogen infrastructure affects its deployment. We also consider a rich set of hydrogen end-use technologies and vary their costs to understand how demand technologies affect deployment. We find that the availability of hydrogen transmission and distribution infrastructure primarily affects the hydrogen production mix, particularly the share produced centrally versus onsite, whereas assumptions about end-use technology primarily affect the scale of hydrogen deployment. In effect, hydrogen can be a distributed energy vector, enabled by onsite renewable electrolysis and, to a lesser extent, by onsite industrial production using natural gas with carbon capture and storage (CCS). While the share of hydrogen in final energy is small relative to the share of other major energy carriers in our scenarios, hydrogen enables decarbonization in difficult-to-electrify end uses such as industrial high-temperature heat. Its contribution to greenhouse gas mitigation increases as the climate objective is tightened.

Published: April 20, 2024

Citation

O'Rourke P.R., B. Mignone, P. Kyle, B.R. Chapman, J.G. Fuhrman, P. Wolfram, and H.C. McJeon. 2023. Supply and demand drivers of global hydrogen deployment in the transition towards a decarbonized energy system. Environmental Science & Technology 57, no. 48:19508–19518. PNNL-ACT-SA-10752. doi:10.1021/acs.est.3c03751