1. Industrial decarbonization via hydrogen: a critical and systematic review of developments, socio-technical systems and policy options
- Author
-
Steve Griffiths, Benjamin K. Sovacool, Morgan Bazilian, Joao M. Uratani, and Jin-Soo Kim
- Subjects
Sociotechnical system ,Hydrogen ,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment ,business.industry ,Anthropogenic emissions ,Climate mitigation ,Fossil fuel ,Oil refinery ,Energy Engineering and Power Technology ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Environmental economics ,Energy storage ,Industrial utilization ,Fuel Technology ,Nuclear Energy and Engineering ,chemistry ,Greenhouse gas ,Climate change ,Environmental science ,Industrial decarbonization ,business ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Hydrogen production - Abstract
Industrial decarbonization is a daunting challenge given the relative lack of low-carbon options available for “hard to decarbonize” industries such as iron and steel, cement, and chemicals. Hydrogen, however, offers one potential solution to this dilemma given that is an abundant and energy dense fuel capable of not just meeting industrial energy requirements, but also providing long-duration energy storage. Despite the abundance and potential of hydrogen, isolating it and utilizing it for industrial decarbonization remains logistically challenging and is, in many cases, expensive. Industrial utilization of hydrogen is currently dominated by oil refining and chemical production with nearly all of the hydrogen used in these applications coming from fossil fuels. The generation of low-carbon or zero-carbon hydrogen for industrial applications requires new modes of hydrogen production that either intrinsically produce no carbon emissions or are combined with carbon capture technologies. This review takes a sociotechnical perspective to examine the full range of industries and industrial processes for which hydrogen can support decarbonization and the technical, economic, social and political factors that will impact hydrogen adoption.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF