Hydrogen

The future of hydrogen – opportunities and challenges

Publication date:
2009-01-01
First published in:
International Journal of Hydrogen Energy
Authors:
M. Ball, M. Wietschel
Abstract:

The following article is reproduced from ‘The Hydrogen Economy: Opportunities and Challenges’, edited by Michael Ball and Martin Wietschel, to be published by Cambridge University Press in June 2009. In the light of ever-increasing global energy use, the increasing cost of energy services, concerns over energy supply security, climate change and local air pollution, this book centres around the question of how growing energy demand for transport can be met in the long term. Given the sustained interest in and controversial discussion of the prospects of hydrogen, the authors highlight the opportunities and the challenges of introducing hydrogen as alternative fuel in the transport sector from an economic, technical and environmental point of view. Through its multi-disciplinary approach the book provides a broad range of researchers, decision makers and policy makers with a solid and wide-ranging knowledge base concerning the hydrogen economy.

Published in: International Journal of Hydrogen Energy, Volume 34, Issue 2, January 2009, Pages 615-627
Available from: ScienceDirect

Hydrogen's role in an uncertain energy future

Publication date:
2009-01-01
First published in:
International Journal of Hydrogen Energy
Authors:
P. Moriarty, D. Honnery
Abstract:

This study explores global energy demand, and hydrogen's role, over the 21st century. It considers four illustrative cases: a high (1000 EJ) and a low (300 EJ) energy future, and for each of these conditions, a high (80%) and low (20%) fossil fuel energy share. We argue that neither high energy future is probable, because of resource limitations, and rising energy, environmental and money costs per unit of delivered energy as annual energy demand rises far beyond present levels. The low energy/low fossil case is most likely, followed by the low energy/high fossil case, although both require large cuts in energy use, and most probably, lifestyle changes in high energy use countries. Hydrogen production would be best favoured in the low fossil fuel options, with production both greater, and implemented earlier, in the higher energy case. It is thus least likely in the low energy/high fossil fuel case.

Published in: International Journal of Hydrogen Energy, Volume 34, Issue 1, January 2009, Pages 31-39
Available from: ScienceDirect

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