Skip to content
1900

Competition and Equilibrium in Future Global Renewable Hydrogen Trade: A Game-theoretic Analysis

Abstract

Global renewable hydrogen trade is expected to play a key role in decarbonizing future energy systems. Yet hydrogen exporters may deviate from perfectly competitive behaviour to influence prices, similarly to the existing fossil fuel market, with important implications for consumer welfare and the pace of the energy transition. This study develops a global renewable hydrogen trade model that captures potential strategic interactions among exporters using a Stackelberg game-theoretic framework. The model is formulated as an Equilibrium Problem with Equilibrium Constraints (EPEC) and solved under three alternative equilibria: a profitmaximizing Nash equilibrium, a cost-minimizing Nash equilibrium, and a welfare-maximizing benchmark representing perfect competition. Results indicate that producers may strategically reduce their export quantities by up to 40 % relative to perfect competition to maximize profits. Such behaviour raises prices to a minimum of 4.5 USD/kg in 2050 across major import markets, thereby significantly eroding consumer surplus. Strategic behaviour of dominant exporters also shifts trade flows, reshaping the global allocation of hydrogen supply. Sensitivity analysis further reveals that financing costs play a key role in shaping strategic producers’ behaviour, with lower financing costs helping to reduce prices and stimulate demand. These findings highlight the implications of imperfect competition in global hydrogen trade and suggest that policy measures may be needed to mitigate potential negative consequences.

Funding source: A.H. acknowledges funding from EPSRC via the HI-ACT project (EP/X038823/2). A.H. and N.S. acknowledge FCDO funding via the Climate Compatible Growth (CCG) project. CCG is funded by UK aid from the UK government. S.M. acknowledges funding from the European Union’s HORIZON EUROPE Research and Innovation Programme under Grant Agreement No. 101056306 (IAM COMPACT).
Related subjects: Policy & Socio-Economics
Loading

Article metrics loading...

/content/journal8307
2025-11-10
2026-03-15

Metrics

/content/journal8307
Loading
This is a required field
Please enter a valid email address
Approval was a Success
Invalid data
An Error Occurred
Approval was partially successful, following selected items could not be processed due to error
Please enter a valid_number test