December 05, 2023
By Sean Wolfe
Renewable Energy World.
DOE: Thermal conversion and carbon
capture still too costly to reach clean hydrogen goals
A new report from the DOE says the
commercially-available combination of thermal conversion and carbon
capture technology isn’t cheap enough to reach clean hydrogen cost
goals.
Thermal conversion of fossil fuels is the most widespread and
lowest-cost method of hydrogen (H2)
production today. A combination of thermal conversion and carbon
capture is commercially ready and can offset some of the emissions
from the process, but a new report from the U.S. Department of Energy
(DOE) says it still isn’t cheap enough to reach its goal of clean
hydrogen costs of $1 per kilogram by 2031.
The DOE announced these findings in the first of three assessments of
clean-hydrogen production pathways for the Department’s Hydrogen
Shot, unveiled
in June 2021. It is the first goal of the Energy
Earthshots Initiative, a set of eight separate moonshots to
accelerate breakthroughs of more abundant, affordable, and reliable
clean energy solutions within the decade. The Hydrogen Shot seeks to
reduce the cost of clean hydrogen by 80% to the aforementioned goal of
$1 per kilogram by 2031.
The Hydrogen
Shot Technology Assessment: Thermal Conversion Approaches report,
led by experts at DOE’s National Energy Technology Laboratory, Office
of Fossil Energy and Carbon Management, and in coordination with the
Hydrogen and Fuel Cell Technologies Office, presents a snapshot of
various thermal conversion pathways for clean hydrogen production,
including technology status and envisioned approaches for achieving
the Hydrogen Shot goals through research, development, and deployment
(RD&D) advances.
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The report focuses on producing clean hydrogen through thermal
conversion of fossil and/or waste feedstocks, with carbon capture and
sequestration, that could meet the Hydrogen Shot goal. Thermal
conversion is a process that uses heat as the energy source to drive
chemical reactions that convert carbon-based feedstocks into other
fuels and chemical energy carriers.
Thermal conversion, and other processes like it, emits around 10 kg of
CO2 equivalents per kg of H2 produced on a life cycle basis, the DOE
said, prompting the use of carbon capture technology. Carbon capture
has been demonstrated on reforming pathways and the combination of the
two is commercially ready, DOE said, but “most thermal conversion
pathways with a thorough carbon management strategy will need to
achieve costs lower than what has been currently modeled.”
The report found that based on screening-level
analyses, hydrogen costs could be reduced through technological
advancement to between $1.30 and $1.40 per kilogram depending on the
pathway. Therefore,
beyond RD&D improvements, the report also explored the following
factors for cost reduction: plant scale, market scenarios, plant site
location, optimization of carbon dioxide (CO2) transport and storage,
byproduct sales, CO2 valuation, process intensification, and
integration with other energy systems.
The DOE says achieving the Hydrogen Shot’s 80% cost reduction goal can
unlock new markets for hydrogen, including steel manufacturing, clean
ammonia, energy storage, and heavy-duty trucks, creating jobs,
reducing greenhouse gas emissions, and helping America to compete in
the clean energy market on a global scale.
In October, the DOE named
seven regional clean hydrogen hubs to receive $7 billion in
federal funding, a long-awaited announcement for an initiative aimed
at accelerating the commercial-scale deployment of clean hydrogen and
driving down its cost.
Funded by the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA), the seven
H2Hubs are located around the U.S. and aim to jumpstart a national
network of clean hydrogen producers, consumers, and connective
infrastructure. Each hub will include clean hydrogen production,
storage, delivery, and end-use components.
Originally published in Renewable
Energy World.
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