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Exploring European Hydrogen Demand Variations under Tactical Uncertainty with Season Hydrogen Storage

Abstract

Achieving a net-zero energy system in Europe by 2050 will likely require large-scale deployment of hydrogen and seasonal energy storage to manage variability in renewable supply and demand. This study addresses two key objectives: (1) to develop a modeling framework that integrates seasonal storage into a stochastic multihorizon capacity expansion model, explicitly capturing tactical uncertainty across timescales; and (2) to assess the impact of seasonal hydrogen storage on long-term investment decisions in European power and hydrogen infrastructure under three hydrogen demand scenarios. To this end, the multi-horizon stochastic programming model EMPIRE is extended with tactical stages within each investment period, enabling operational decisions to be modeled as a multi-stage stochastic program. This approach captures short-term uncertainty while preserving long-term investment foresight. Results show that seasonal hydrogen storage considerably enhances system flexibility, displacing the need for up to 600 TWh/yr of dispatchable generation in Europe after 2040 and sizing down cross-border hydrogen transmission capacities by up to 12%. Storage investments increase by factors of 5–14, which increases the investments in variable renewables and improve utilization, particularly solar. Scenarios with seasonal storage also show up to 6% lower total system costs and more balanced infrastructure deployment across regions. These findings underline the importance of modeling temporal uncertainty and seasonal dynamics in long-term energy system planning.

Funding source: This publication has been funded by the Hydrogen Pathways 2050 project - Transition of the Norwegian society and value creation from export (project code 326769) and the NordicH2ubs project - Roadmaps toward 2030 and 2040 (project code 346870). The authors gratefully acknowledge the financial support from the Research Council of Norway and both projects’ user partners.
Countries: Denmark ; Norway ; United Kingdom
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/content/journal7534
2025-08-14
2025-11-08
/content/journal7534
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