Germany
Exhaust Gas Aftertreatment to Minimize Nox Emissions from Hydrogen-fueled Internal Combustion Engines
Oct 2023
Publication
Hydrogen-fueled internal combustion engines are a promising CO2-free and zero-impact emission alternative to battery or fuel cell electric powertrains. Advantages include long service life robustness against fuel impurities and a strong infrastructural base with existing production lines and workshop stations. In order to make hydrogen engines harmless in terms of pollutant emissions as well NOX emissions at the tailpipe must be reduced as low as the zero-impact emission level. Here the application of selective catalytic reduction (SCR) catalysts is a promising solution that can be rapidly adopted from conventional diesel engines. This paper therefore investigates the influences of the hydrogen concentration in the raw exhaust gas of the NO2/NOX ratio and of the space velocity on the performance of two different SCR technologies. The results show that both types of SCR copper-zeolite and vanadium-based have their advantages and drawbacks. Copper-based SCR catalysts have an early light-off temperature and reach maximum efficiencies of up to >99%. On the other hand vanadium systems promise almost no secondary N2O emissions. As a result we combined both approaches to create a superior solution with high efficiency and lowest secondary emissions.
The Market Introduction of Hydrogen Focussing on Bus Refueling
Dec 2023
Publication
Public transport plays a prominent role with respect to mitigating transport-related environmental effects by improving passenger transport efficiency and the quality of life in cities. Batteries and fuel cells are at the forefront of the technological shift to zero-emission powertrains. Within the scope of the German-funded project BIC H2 corresponding systems analysis research focuses on the market introduction of fuel cell–electric buses in the Rhine–Ruhr Metropolitan Region through 2035. This study presents the related methods and major outcomes of this techno-economic research which spans spatially-resolved hydrogen demand modeling of all relevant sectors to hydrogen refueling stations and upstream infrastructure modeling to scenario-based analyses. The latter builds upon an empirical study supporting the development of the Hydrogen Roadmap of the State of North Rhine–Westphalia (NRW). Our results show that the demand in NRW alone is expected to account for one third of total German hydrogen use. Hydrogen bus refueling could substantially support market introduction during its early phases. In the long term however hydrogen demand in industry is significantly higher compared to that in the transport sector. Furthermore spatial analysis identifies regions with pronounced hydrogen demands that could therefore be candidates for initial infrastructure investments. With the Cologne area showing the highest hydrogen demand levels such regions can offer particularly high infrastructure utilization e.g. for bus refueling. On the infrastructure side trailers for transporting gaseous hydrogen to refueling stations are the most favorable option through 2035. Pipelines would be the preferred solution soon after 2035 due to increased hydrogen demand. If effectively deployed converted natural gas pipelines would be the most cost-effective option even earlier.
How to Connect Energy Islands: Trade-offs Between Hydrogen and Electricity Infrastructure
Apr 2023
Publication
In light of offshore wind expansions in the North and Baltic Seas in Europe further ideas on using offshore space for renewable-based energy generation have evolved. One of the concepts is that of energy islands which entails the placement of energy conversion and storage equipment near offshore wind farms. Offshore placement of electrolysers will cause interdependence between the availability of electricity for hydrogen production and for power transmission to shore. This paper investigates the trade-offs between integrating energy islands via electricity versus hydrogen infrastructure. We set up a combined capacity expansion and electricity dispatch model to assess the role of electrolysers and electricity cables given the availability of renewable energy from the islands. We find that the electricity system benefits more from connecting close-to-shore wind farms via power cables. In turn electrolysis is more valuable for far-away energy islands as it avoids expensive long-distance cable infrastructure. We also find that capacity investment in electrolysers is sensitive to hydrogen prices but less to carbon prices. The onshore network and congestion caused by increased activity close to shore influence the sizing and siting of electrolysers.
Hydrogen Behavior and Mitigation Measures: State of Knowledge and Database from Nuclear Community
Sep 2023
Publication
Hydrogen has become a key enabler for decarbonization as countries pledge to reach net zero carbon emissions by 2050. With hydrogen infrastructure expanding rapidly beyond its established applications there is a requirement for robust safety practices solutions and regulations. Since the 1980s considerable efforts have been undertaken by the nuclear community to address hydrogen safety issues because in severe accidents of water-cooled nuclear reactors a large amount of hydrogen can be produced from the oxidation of metallic components with steam. As evidenced in the Fukushima accident hydrogen combustion can cause severe damage to reactor building structures promoting the release of radioactive fission products to the environment. A number of large-scale experiments were conducted in the framework of national and international projects to understand the hydrogen dispersion and combustion behaviour under postulated accidental conditions. Empirical engineering models and numerical codes were developed and validated for safety analysis. Hydrogen recombiners known as Passive Autocatalytic Recombiner (PAR) were developed and have been widely installed in nuclear containments to mitigate hydrogen risk. Complementary actions and strategies were established as part of severe accident management guidelines to prevent or limit the consequences of hydrogen explosions. In addition hydrogen monitoring systems were developed and implemented in nuclear power plants. The experience and knowledge gained from the nuclear community on hydrogen safety is valuable and applicable for other industries involving hydrogen production transport storage and use.
Technology Transfer from Fuel Processing for Fuel Cells to Fuel Synthesis from Hydrogen and Carbon Dioxide
Aug 2023
Publication
Improving the energy efficiency of existing technologies such as the on-board power supply of trucks ships and aircraft is an important endeavor for reducing primary energy consumption. The approach consists of using fuel cell technology in conjunction with hydrogen production from liquid fuels. However the energy transition with the goal of complete climate-neutrality requires technological changes in the use of hydrogen produced from renewable energy via electrolysis. Synthetic fuels are an important building block for drive systems that will continue to require liquid energy carriers in the future due to their range. This study addresses the question of whether technical devices that were developed for the generation of hydrogen from liquid fuels for fuel cells to generate electricity are now suitable for the reverse process chain or can play an important role in it. The new process chain produces hydrogen from sustainable electricity combining it with carbon dioxide to create a synthetic liquid fuel.
Design Investigation of Potential Long-Range Hydrogen Combustion Blended Wing Body Aircraft with Future Technologies
Jun 2023
Publication
Present work investigates the potential of a long-range commercial blended wing body configuration powered by hydrogen combustion engines with future airframe and propulsion technologies. Future technologies include advanced materials load alleviation techniques boundary layer ingestion and ultra-high bypass ratio engines. The hydrogen combustion configuration was compared to the configuration powered by kerosene with respect to geometric properties performance characteristics energy demand equivalent CO2 emissions and Direct Operating Costs. In addition technology sensitivity studies were performed to assess the potential influence of each technology on the configuration. A multi-fidelity sizing methodology using low- and mid-fidelity methods for rapid configuration sizing was created to assess the configuration and perform robust analyses and multi-disciplinary optimizations. To assess potential uncertainties of the fidelity of aerodynamic analysis tools high-fidelity aerodynamic analysis and optimization framework MACHAero was used for additional verification. Comparison of hydrogen and kerosene blended wing body aircraft showed a potential reduction of equivalent CO2 emission by 15% and 81% for blue and green hydrogen compared to the kerosene blended wing body and by 44% and 88% with respect to a conventional B777-300ER aircraft. Advancements in future technologies also significantly affect the geometric layout of aircraft. Boundary layer ingestion and ultra-high bypass ratio engines demonstrated the highest potential for fuel reduction although both technologies conflict with each other. However operating costs of hydrogen aircraft could establish a significant problem if pessimistic and base hydrogen price scenarios are achieved for blue and green hydrogen respectively. Finally configurational problems featured by classical blended wing body aircraft are magnified for the hydrogen case due to the significant volume requirements to store hydrogen fuel.
Challenges of Industrial-Scale Testing Infrastructure for Green Hydrogen Technologies
Apr 2023
Publication
Green hydrogen is set to become the energy carrier of the future provided that production technologies such as electrolysis and solar water splitting can be scaled to global dimensions. Testing these hydrogen technologies on the MW scale requires the development of dedicated new test facilities for which there is no precedent. This perspective highlights the challenges to be met on the path to implementing a test facility for large-scale water electrolysis photoelectrochemical and photocatalytic water splitting and aims to serve as a much-needed blueprint for future test facilities based on the authors’ own experience in establishing the Hydrogen Lab Leuna. Key aspects to be considered are the electricity and utility requirements of the devices under testing the analysis of the produced H2 and O2 and the safety regulations for handling large quantities of H2 . Choosing the right location is crucial not only for meeting these device requirements but also for improving financial viability through supplying affordable electricity and providing a remunerated H2 sink to offset the testing costs. Due to their lower TRL and requirement for a light source large-scale photocatalysis and photoelectrochemistry testing are less developed and the requirements are currently less predictable.
Outlook and Challenges for Hydrogen Storage in Nanoporous Materials
Feb 2016
Publication
Darren P. Broom,
Colin Webb,
Katherine Hurst,
P. A. Parilla,
Thomas Gennett,
C. M. Brown,
Renju Zacharia,
E. Tylianakis,
E. Klontzas,
George E. Froudakis,
Th. A. Steriotis,
Pantelis N. Trikalitis,
Donald L. Anton,
B. Hardy,
David A. Tamburello,
Claudio Corgnale,
B. A. van Hassel,
D. Cossement,
Richard Chahine and
Michael Hirscher
Considerable progress has been made recently in the use of nanoporous materials for hydrogen storage. In this article the current status of the field and future challenges are discussed ranging from important open fundamental questions such as the density and volume of the adsorbed phase and its relationship to overall storage capacity to the development of new functional materials and complete storage system design. With regard to fundamentals the use of neutron scattering to study adsorbed H2 suitable adsorption isotherm equations and the accurate computational modelling and simulation of H2 adsorption are discussed. The new materials covered include flexible metal–organic frameworks core–shell materials and porous organic cage compounds. The article concludes with a discussion of the experimental investigation of real adsorptive hydrogen storage tanks the improvement in the thermal conductivity of storage beds and new storage system concepts and designs.
Towards Climate-neutral Aviation: Assessment of Maintenance Requirements for Airborne Hydrogen Storage and Distribution Systems
Apr 2023
Publication
Airlines are faced with the challenge of reducing their environmental footprint in an effort to push for climate-neutral initiatives that comply with international regulations. In the past the aviation industry has followed the approach of incremental improvement of fuel efficiency while simultaneously experiencing significant growth in annual air traffic. With the increase in air traffic negating any reduction in Greenhouse Gas (GHG) emissions more disruptive technologies such as hydrogen-based onboard power generation are required to reduce the environmental impact of airline operations. However despite initial euphoria and first conceptual studies for hydrogen-powered aircraft several decades ago there still has been no mass adoption to this day. Besides the challenges of a suitable ground infrastructure this can partly be attributed to uncertainties with the associated maintenance requirements and the expected operating costs to demonstrate the economic viability of this technology. With this study we address this knowledge gap by estimating changes towards scheduled maintenance activities for an airborne hydrogen storage and distribution system. In particular we develop a detailed system design for a hydrogen-powered fuel-cell-based auxiliary power generation and perform a comparative analysis with an Airbus A320 legacy system. That analysis allows us to (a) identify changes for the expected maintenance effort to enhance subsequent techno-economic assessments (b) identify implications of specific design assumptions with corresponding maintenance activities while ensuring regulatory compliance and (c) describe the impact on the resulting task execution. The thoroughly examined interactions between system design and subsequent maintenance requirements of this study can support practitioners in the development of prospective hydrogen-powered aircraft. In particular it allows the inclusion of maintenance implications in early design stages of corresponding system architectures. Furthermore since the presented methodology is transferable to different design solutions it provides a blueprint for alternative operating concepts such as the complete substitution of kerosene by hydrogen to power the main engines.
Synthetic Fuels in the German Industry Sector Depending on Climate Protection Level
Aug 2021
Publication
Especially the electrification of the industry sector is highly complex and challenging mainly due to process-specific requirements. In this context there are several industrial processes where the direct and indirect use of electricity is subject to technical restrictions. In order to achieve the national climate goals the fossil energy consumption remaining after the implementation of efficiency and sufficiency measures as well as direct electrification has to be substituted through hydrogen and synthetic gaseous liquid and solid hydrocarbons. As the main research object the role of synthetic fuels in industrial transformation paths is investigated and analyzed by combining individual greenhouse gas abatement measures within the Sector Model Industry. Sector Model Industry is an energy consumption model that performs discrete deterministic energy and emission dynamic calculations with a time horizon up to 2050 at macroeconomic level. The results indicate that the use of synthetic fuels can be expected with a high level of climate protection. The industrial CO2 target in the model makes it necessary to replace CO2 -intensive fossil with renewable fuels. The model uses a total of 163 TWh of synthetic fuels in the climate protection scenario and thus achieves an 88% decrease in CO2 emissions in 2050 compared to 1990. This means that the GHG abatement achieved in industry is within the range of the targeted CO2 mitigation of the overall system in Germany of between 80 and 95% in 2050 compared to 1990. Due to technical restrictions the model mainly uses synthetic methane instead of hydrogen (134 TWh). The results show that despite high costs synthetic fuels are crucial for defossilization as a fall back option in the industrial scenario considering high climate ambition. The scenario does not include hydrogen technologies for heat supply. Accordingly the climate protection scenario uses hydrogen only in the steel industry for the direct reduction of iron (21 TWh). 8 TWh of synthetic oil substitute the same amount of fossil oil in the climate protection scenario. A further analysis conducted on the basis of the model results shows that transformation in the energy system and the use of smart ideas concepts and technologies are a basic prerequisite for enabling the holistic defossilisation of industry. The findings in the research can contribute to the cost-efficient use of synthetic fuels in industry and thus serve as a basis for political decision making. Moreover the results may have a practical relevance not only serving as a solid comparison base for the outcome of other studies but also as input data for further simulation of energy system transformation paths.
The Role of Hydrogen for the Defossilization of the German Chemical Industry
Apr 2023
Publication
Within the European Green Deal the European industry is summoned to transform towards a green and circular economy to reduce CO2-emissions and reach climate goals. Special focus is on the chemical industry to boost recycling processes for plastics exploit resource efficiency potentials and switch to a completely renewable feedstock (defossilization). Despite common understanding that drastic changes have to take place it is yet unknown how the industrial transformation should be accomplished. This work explains how a cost-optimal defossilization of the chemical industry in the context of national greenhouse gas (GHG) mitigation strategies look like. The central part of this investigation is based on a national energy system model to optimize the future energy system design of Germany as a case study for a highly industrialized country. A replacement of fossil-based feedstocks by renewable feedstocks leads to a significant increase in hydrogen demand by þ40% compared to a reference scenario. The resulting demand of hydrogen-based energy carriers including the demand for renewable raw materials must be produced domestically or imported. This leads to cumulative additional costs of the transformation that are 32% higher than those of a reference scenario without defossilization of the industry. Fischer-Tropsch synthesis and the methanol-to-olefins route can be identified as key technologies for the defossilization of the chemical industry.
Hydrogen Related Accidents and Lesson Learned from Events Reported in the East Continental Asia
Sep 2023
Publication
Hydrogen as an energy carrier plays an important role in carbon neutrality and energy transition. Hydrogen is the lightest element with a density of only 0.08375 kg/m3 in gaseous form at standard temperature and pressure (STP); as a result hydrogen is usually stored and transported in a highly compressed form. It is prone to leakage and has a very low ignition energy of 0.017 mJ. Safety remains a challenge in the use of hydrogen as an energy source. This paper examines approximately 20 hydrogen-related accidents in China over a 20-year period focusing on the root causes consequences of the accidents and responses to them. These accidents occurred in the production storage transport and application of hydrogen with different causes in different locations and resulting in losses at different scales. Some statistical evaluations were conducted to learn lessons from the accidents. The main objective of this paper is (i) to retrieve a set of hydrogen related incidents from a region which is under-represented in incident repositories (ii) to contribute to a generalised lesson learned from them and (iii) to assist the definition of realistic scenarios for commonly occurring hydrogen accidents.
What Does the Public Know About Technological Solutions for Achieving Carbon Neutrality? Citizens' Knowledge of Energy Transition and the Role of Media
Aug 2023
Publication
The present study explores the relation between media use and knowledge in the context of the energy transition. To identify relevant knowledge categories we relied on the expertise of an interdisciplinary research team. Based on this expertise we identified awareness-knowledge of changes in the energy system and principles-knowledge of hydrogen as important knowledge categories. With data obtained from a nationwide online survey of the German-speaking population (n = 2025) conducted in August 2021 we examined the level of knowledge concerning both categories in the German population. Furthermore we studied its associations with exposure to journalistic media and direct communication from non-media actors (e.g. scientists). Our results revealed a considerable lack of knowledge for both categories. Considering the media variables we found only weak and in some cases even negative relations with the use of journalistic media or other actors that spread information online. However we found comparably strong associations between both knowledge categories and the control variables of sex education and personal interest. We use these results to open up a general discussion of the role of the media in knowledge acquisition processes.
AMHYCO Project - Advances in H2/CO Combustion, Recombination and Containment Modelling
Sep 2023
Publication
During a severe accident in a nuclear power plant one of the potential threats to the containment is the occurrence of energetic combustion events. In modern plants Severe Accident Management Guidelines (SAMG) as well as dedicated mitigation hardware are in place to minimize/mitigate this combustion risk and thus avoid the release of radioactive material into the environment. Advancements in SAMGs are in the focus of AMHYCO an EU-funded Horizon 2020 project officially launched on October 1st 2020. The project consortium consists of 12 organizations (from six European countries and one from Canada) and is coordinated by the Universidad Politécnica de Madrid (UPM). The progress made in the first two years of the AMHYCO project is here presented. A comprehensive bibliographic review has been conducted providing a common foundation to build the knowledge gained during the project. After an extensive set of accident transients simulated both for phases occurring inside and outside the reactor pressure vessel a set of challenging sequences from the combustion risk perspective for different power plant types were identified. At the same time three generic containment models for the three considered reactor designs have been created to provide the full containment analysis simulations with lumped parameter models 3-dimensional containment codes and CFD codes. In order to further consolidate the model base combustion experiments and performance tests on passive auto-catalytic recombiners under explosion prone H2/CO atmospheres were performed at CNRS (France) and FZJ (Germany). Finally it is worth saying that the experimental data and engineering models generated from the AMHYCO project are useful for other industries outside the nuclear one.
Assessment of the Green Hydrogen Value Chain in Cases of the Local Industry in Chile Applying an Optimization Model
May 2024
Publication
This study assessed the feasibility of integrating a green hydrogen value chain into the local industry examining two case studies by comparing four scenarios. The optimization focused on generating electricity from stationary renewable sources such as solar or through Power Purchase Agreements to produce sufficient hydrogen in electrolyzers. Current demand profiles renewable participation targets electricity supply sources levelized costs of energy and hydrogen and technology options were considered. The most cost-effective scenario showed a levelized cost of energy of 0.032 and 0.05 US$/kWh and a hydrogen cost below 1.0 US$/kgH2 for cases 1 and 2 respectively. A sensitivity analysis highlighted the critical influence of fuel cell technology on cost modification underscoring the importance of focusing cost reduction strategies on these technologies to enhance the economic viability of the green hydrogen value chain. Specifically a high sensitivity towards reducing the levelized costs of energy and hydrogen in the port sector with adjustments in fuel cell technology costs was identified indicating the need for specific policies and supports to facilitate their adoption.
European Hydrogen Train the Trainer Framework for Responders: Outcomes of the Hyresponder Project
Sep 2023
Publication
Síle Brennan,
Didier Bouix,
Christian Brauner,
Dominic Davis,
Natalie DeBacker,
Alexander Dyck,
André Vagner Gaathaug,
César García Hernández,
Laurence Grand-Clement,
Etienne Havret,
Deborah Houssin-Agbomson,
Petr Kupka,
Laurent Lecomte,
Eric Maranne,
Vladimir V. Molkov,
Pippa Steele,
Adolfo Pinilla,
Paola Russo and
Gerhard Schoepf
HyResponder is a European Hydrogen Train the Trainer programme for responders. This paper describes the key outputs of the project and the steps taken to develop and implement a long-term sustainable train the trainer programme in hydrogen safety for responders across Europe and beyond. This FCH2 JU (now Clean Hydrogen Joint Undertaking) funded project has built on the successful outcomes of the previous HyResponse project. HyResponder has developed further and updated educational operational and virtual reality training for trainers of responders to reflect the state-of-the-art in hydrogen safety including liquid hydrogen and expand the programme across Europe and specifically within the 10 countries represented directly within the project consortium: Austria Belgium the Czech Republic France Germany Italy Norway Spain Switzerland and the United Kingdom. For the first time four levels of educational materials from fire fighter through to specialist have been developed. The digital training resources are available on the e-Platform (https://hyresponder.eu/e-platform/). The revised European Emergency Response Guide is now available to all stakeholders. The resources are intended to be used to support national training programs. They are available in 8 languages: Czech Dutch English French German Italian Norwegian and Spanish. Through the HyResponder activities trainers from across Europe have undertaken joint actions which are in turn being used to inform the delivery of regional and national training both within and beyond the project. The established pan-European network of trainers is shaping the future in the important for inherently safer deployment of hydrogen systems and infrastructure across Europe and enhancing the reach and impact of the programme.
The Impact of the Russian War against Ukraine on the German Hydrogen Discourse
Jan 2024
Publication
This contribution delves into the transformative effects of the Russian–Ukrainian war on the discourse surrounding German hydrogen. Employing structural topical modeling (STM) on a vast dataset of 2192 newspaper articles spanning from 2019 to 2022 it aims to uncover thematic shifts attributed to the Russian invasion of Ukraine. The onset of the war in February 2022 triggered a significant pivot in the discourse shifting it from sustainability and climate-change mitigation to the securing of energy supplies through new partnerships particularly in response to Russia’s unreliability. Germany started exploring alternative energy trading partners like Canada and Australia emphasizing green hydrogen development. The study illustrates how external shocks can expedite the uptake of new technologies. The adoption of the “H2 readiness” concept for LNG terminals contributes to the successful implementation of green hydrogen. In summary the Russian–Ukrainian war profoundly impacted the German hydrogen discourse shifting the focus from sustainability to energy supply security underscoring the interconnectedness of energy security and sustainability in Germany’s hydrogen policy.
Exploring the State-of-operation of Proton Exchange Membrane Electrolyzers
Dec 2024
Publication
Proton exchange membrane electrolytic cells (PEMECs) have the potential to provide green Hydrogen as a sustainable energy source. PEMEC has already been applied at an industrially relevant scale. However it still faces challenges regarding reliability and durability especially in long-term operation. This review emphasizes the need for standardizing the cell configuration the testing protocols and the evaluation procedures to attain the optimum operation settings and eventually precisely evaluating the degradation rate. Potential physicochemical and electrical operational health indicators are described to identify the degradation of a distinct cell component in a running PEMEC. The reliable evaluation of degradation rate via operational health indicators with a robust supervisory system under stringent operating conditions is likely to diagnose the degradation mechanism. By developing incremental empirical degradation models via mapping a correlation between the history of proposed operational health indicators the instantaneous degradation rate can be quantified. This approach in turn enables us to determine the state-of-operation of an electrolyzer during service thereby benchmarking the durability of PEMEC. Finally with the target of scaling up and fulfilling the commercial demands for PEMEC the significance and literature contributions regarding operation management and prog nostics are expressed.
A Rigorous Optimization Method for Long-term Multi-stage Investment Planning: Integration of Hydrogen into a Decentralized Multi-energy System
Dec 2024
Publication
Thoroughly assessing future energy systems requires examining both their end states and the paths leading to them. Employing dynamic investment or multi-stage optimization models is crucial for this analysis. However solving these optimization problems becomes increasingly challenging due to their long time horizons – often spanning several decades – and their dynamic nature. While simplifications like aggregations are often used to expedite solving procedures they introduce higher uncertainty into the results and might lead to suboptimal solutions compared to non-simplified models. Against this background this paper presents a rigorous optimization method tailored for multi-stage optimization problems in long-term energy system planning. By dividing the solution algorithm into a design and operational optimization step the proposed method efficiently finds feasible solutions for the non-simplified optimization problem with simultaneous quality proof. Applied to a real-life energy system of a waste treatment plant in Germany the method significantly outperforms a benchmark solver by reducing the computational time to find the first feasible solution from more than two weeks to less than one hour. Furthermore it exhibits greater robustness compared to a conventional long-term optimization approach and yields solutions closer to the optimum. Overall this method offers decision-makers computationally efficient and reliable information for planning investment decisions in energy systems.
Green Hydrogen Production and Its Land Tenure Consequences in Africa: An Interpretive Review
Sep 2023
Publication
Globally a green hydrogen economy rush is underway and many companies investors governments and environmentalists consider it as an energy source that could foster the global energy transition. The enormous potential for hydrogen production for domestic use and export places Africa in the spotlight in the green hydrogen economy discourse. This discourse remains unsettled regarding how natural resources such as land and water can be sustainably utilized for such a resource-intensive project and what implications this would have. This review argues that green hydrogen production (GHP) in Africa has consequences where land resources (and their associated natural resources) are concerned. It discusses the current trends in GHP in Africa and the possibilities for reducing any potential pressures it may put on land and other resource use on the continent. The approach of the review is interpretive and hinges on answering three questions concerning the what why and how of GHP and its land consequences in Africa. The review is based on 41 studies identified from Google Scholar and sources identified via snowballed recommendations from experts. The GHP implications identified relate to land and water use mining-related land stress and environmental ecological and land-related socioeconomic consequences. The paper concludes that GHP may not foster the global energy transition as is being opined by many renewable energy enthusiasts but rather could help foster this transition as part of a greener energy mix. It notes that African countries that have the potential for GHP require the institutionalization of or a change in their existing approaches to land-related energy governance systems in order to achieve success.
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