December 29, 2023
By Michael Barnard
Hydrogen Half Truths Keep Shipping
Fuel Hopes Afloat
H2 Hydrogen Molecule Fuel Cell Element
- GETTY
Maritime shipping is considered one of the hard
to abate sectors, but it’s much less difficult than most assume. As
we’ve seen in this series on electrifying everything everywhere all at
once, bulk shipping will plummet with peak fossil fuel demand and
batteries will power all inland and most short sea shipping.
But we’ll still need in the order of 70 million tons of marine diesel
equivalent energy at the end of this transition. What will it be?
Naturally, the hydrogen-for-energy crowd are pointing at their
favorite molecule and derivatives of it. For this piece, let’s focus
just on hydrogen itself.
What are the half truths about hydrogen, and how do they apply to
maritime shipping?
The first half truth is that hydrogen is the most abundant element in
the universe. If it’s everywhere in large amounts, it must be cheap,
right? Except that hydrogen is also one of the most reactive of
molecules, which means that it binds tightly to other molecules and
doesn’t like to let go. Hydrogen burns well because it reacts very
strongly with oxygen, giving off a lot of energy to make water. But
getting the hydrogen out of the water requires the same scale of
energy, and the laws of thermodynamics tell us that we’re going to
lose energy every time we go through the cycle.
For shipping, water, water everywhere, but none of it turns into
hydrogen cheaply or easily.
The second half truth is that hydrogen has a lot of energy for its
mass, high energy density. That’s true. A kilogram of hydrogen has as
much energy as 2.6 kilograms of diesel or a US gallon of gasoline. The
half truth part is that hydrogen is also one of the least energy dense
by volume. A kilogram of hydrogen as a gas at room temperature at sea
level takes up the same volume as 11,900 liters of or 3,144 US gallons
of gasoline.
That means it has to be compressed to 700 or 800 times the pressure of
the atmosphere at sea level before it’s useful in a car. That’s the
equivalent of being over seven kilometers or four and a half miles
underwater, which is most of the way to the bottom of the Mariana
Trench. And even at that, the energy density by volume is so low you
can only get five kilograms of hydrogen, the equivalent of five
gallons of gas, into a Toyota Mirai. Fuel cells in cars are more
efficient than internal combustion engines, so it’s more like 10
gallons worth of distance, but it’s still not very much.
For shipping, that’s still far too diffuse to
power a 24,000 unit container ship across the Atlantic or Pacific.
Enter liquid hydrogen.
How do you turn this very diffuse gas into a liquid? Well, you chill
it down to 20° above absolute zero, about 273° Celsius below the
temperature we fleshy humans consider reasonably comfortable. That’s a
complex, multi-step process that also requires a full third of the
energy that’s in the hydrogen. Goodbye more energy.
Does that make it as dense as marine fuel? Not
even close. Liquid hydrogen is only 8.5% as dense as diesel, comparing
kilograms per cubic meter. The higher energy density by mass smooths
that out a bit, but you still need four times the volume of shipboard
tanks for the same energy in the fuel. And modern ship engines are as
efficient as fuel cells, so that doesn’t help as it does in cars.
There’s also the problem with liquid hydrogen of boil off. What’s
that? Well, it’s when that extremely cold liquid is exposed to the
slightest of heat and it turns back into a gas. NASA has managed to
not lose any liquid hydrogen from a tank for a year by building a
huge, spherical, absurdly well insulated, mirror-finished tank, but as
a shipping fuel in ports or at anchor, significant hydrogen will be
being lost every day, likely 1% to 3%.
So liquid hydrogen at least gets into the volume range, but isn’t a
slam dunk. Are there any other concerns with it?
Yes, the last half truth. There’s been a STEM- and
economics-illiterate consensus that has developed over the past decade
that making hydrogen eventually would be cheap, as cheap as a US
dollar per kilogram. That’s as cheap as making it from natural gas in
the USA without any carbon capture, and half as cheap as making it
from natural gas in Europe.
Hydrogen will be much more expensive to manufacture than that, likely
in the $6 to $8 per kilogram range without subsidies. Why? There are
four parts to hydrogen costs to consider, but the math is simple.
The first is the capital costs, how much money the equipment costs.
Electrolyzers aren’t cheap at all, and won’t be dirt cheap in the
future due to the nature of what’s in them. They’ll get cheaper, which
will help, but that’s not the end of the capital costs. The
electrolyzer is one of about 28 components in an industrial
electrolysis plant per IRENA, and the rest of the components — the
balance of plant — are already commoditized, off-the-shelf
technologies that are as cheap as they are going to get.
And that’s not the end of the capital costs. Remember that liquid
hydrogen is required. That’s another set of commoditized, expensive,
industrial scale components. Something that can achieve 20° above
absolute zero temperatures makes designer Sub Zero refrigerators look
like the 40 year old beer fridge at the cottage.
Capital costs matter because they have to be spread across the output
of the hydrogen factory. The fewer kilograms manufactured per year,
the higher the capital cost per kilogram.
That means you need more electricity, more of the time, and this gets
into operational expenses for manufacturing hydrogen, the second part.
There’s a corollary half truth about the price of renewable
electricity that needs to be poked at here, that it will be free some
of the time because we’ll be generating too much of it when the wind
is blowing and the sun is shining. The problem is, that’s the
wholesale cost of electricity, not the industrial consumer cost of
electricity delivered to a hydrogen manufacturing plant.
The electricity still has to get to the plant. That requires
transmission, distribution, administration and profits for the
organizations that own the wires and control systems. Per data from
the International Council on Clean Transportation, and more on them
later, that would be two thirds of the levelized cost of renewable
electricity in Europe and one and a half times the cost in the USA.
Those costs aren’t going away even if the wholesale electricity cost
is zero.
And remember the capital expenditure per kilogram of hydrogen. If you
only make hydrogen when the electricity is cheaper, say $0.04 to $0.05
per kilowatt hour because you are — in theory — only paying the
transmission and distribution costs, you are only getting cheap
electricity for perhaps five or ten weeks of the year. That multiplies
the cost per kilogram for the capital expenses by five or ten.
Lazard’s levelized cost of hydrogen for the cheapest electrolysers
available today with no balance of plant with $0.05 electricity for 30
weeks a year is still $3.24 per kilogram. Add a lot per kilogram for
balance of plant and only five to ten weeks per year of operation.
You can’t work under that model because high capital costs drive the
cost per kilogram way up. You have to firm the electricity so you can
operate at least 30 or 40 weeks of the year, preferably 24/7/365.
And that means you end up paying close to industrial rates for
electricity, which in the USA are in the $0.09 per kilowatt hour
range. That doesn’t seem like much, does it. But it is.
With the balance of plant you need 50 to 55 kilowatt hours to make a
kilogram of hydrogen. That’s $4.5o to $5.00 per kilogram just for the
electricity. And then add the capital costs on top of that, which
makes it about $6.00 to $8.00 per kilogram just to manufacture the
hydrogen.
Are we done yet? No. There’s still getting the hydrogen to the port.
Big industrial electrolysis plants won’t be located on prime port
lands because the land cost would be too high. As soon as you have to
move hydrogen between two places, hydrogen costs go up again because,
as noted, it’s really not very dense and it also likes to leak, being
one of the smallest molecules in the universe. It’s expensive to
compress it and pipe it and it’s much more expensive to put it in
trucks and drive it places.
Right now, 85% of hydrogen is consumed at the point where it’s
manufactured because the cost of distribution is so high. Hydrogen
made from natural gas in the USA and Europe today for $1 or $2 per
kilogram costs $17 to $36 to buy in hydrogen refueling stations, in
large part because it’s so expensive to move around. The US Department
of Energy calculates that it would take 14 hydrogen tanker trucks to
move the same amount of energy as one diesel tanker truck. Just
shipping it across oceans in tankers from places with lots of sunshine
would cost five times as much per unit of energy as liquid natural
gas, on top of the cost of hydrogen, per my assessment of a Namibia
proposal.
Are we done yet? No. The hydrogen still has to be chilled to 20° above
absolute zero, which you’ll remember takes a full third of the energy
in the hydrogen. That kilogram of hydrogen has 33.33 kilowatt hours of
energy, so another 11 kilowatt hours at $0.09 per is required, for
another dollar of operational costs.
And then the capital costs for the very expensive cryogenic industrial
components have to be spread across the kilograms of hydrogen before
they are pumped into ships.
That brings the cost up to $8 to $10 per kilogram for shipping fuel.
Is this reasonable? No. That’s $8,000 to $10,000 per ton of fuel when
maritime diesel averages $600 per ton in the USA and Europe, five to
six times as much per unit of energy in the fuel.
And that’s before the very expensive tanks and fuel cells required to
store and use the fuel on the ships. These are realistic costs for the
liquified hydrogen required for shipping fuels, and they are
unreasonable because they are so expensive.
That’s most likely why Equinor, Air Liquide and Eviny abandoned work
on a liquid hydrogen bunkering facility for shipping in Norway earlier
this year. Norway has very cheap industrial rates for electricity and
very low carbon electricity due to all of its big hydroelectric dams.
They would have been able to get electricity for $0.06 per kilowatt
hour. Even at that with reasonable assumptions for electrolyzer,
balance of plant and cryogenic equipment costs, I calculated that the
cost of liquid hydrogen would be $9.30 per kilogram, and that was with
the electrolysis and liquification facility being effectively on the
dock.
But it doesn’t explain why formerly credible organizations like the
International Council on Clean Transportation have been using much
lower costs for liquid hydrogen in their maritime shipping
decarbonization studies. Unfortunately, the people writing those
reports assumed that solely the cost of manufacturing the hydrogen
without distribution or liquification could be used and that
electricity would be very cheap. It was an obvious mistake but
unfortunately all too common in their studies in the past two years.
Is it possible that this analysis would look better if we assumed we
were making blue hydrogen from natural gas with carbon capture bolted
on? Not really. Carbon capture technology has its own capital costs
and operating expenses, 45% of the energy in the natural gas gets
thrown away with the carbon, and there are still the distribution and
liquification costs. As a shipping fuel it might only be four to five
times as expensive, but that’s still much more expensive than
alternatives.
This has been a bit of a dense introduction to the real costs of green
hydrogen, and while it’s been around shipping, the same economics
apply to any manufacturing and distribution of hydrogen. The half
truths about hydrogen — it’s abundant, it’s energy dense, capital
expenses will get a lot lower and electricity will be free — have been
used to create a false consensus that it’s going to be an energy
carrier in the future.
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Michael Barnard
Green Play Ammonia™, Yielder® NFuel Energy.
Spokane, Washington. 99212
509 995 1879
Cell, Pacific Time Zone.
General office:
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6854
4501 East Trent
Ave.
Spokane, WA 99212
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