| Invasion of Ukraine an inadvertent boost for green hydrogen 
 Rystad   Energy has joined BloombergNEF with a significant forecast for gray  and  blue hydrogen off the back of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.  According  to the analysts, the impact of the war has sent prices of  fossil  fuel-tied forms of hydrogen production surging, leaving the  gradual but  consistent downward price trend of green hydrogen now  looking remarkably  competitive.
 
 March 21, 2022   Blake Matich
 
 Geopolitics
 Hydrogen
 Markets
 Markets & Policy
 Europe
 Germany
 Russia
 Spain
 Ukraine
 Western Europe
 
 
  Image: Rystad Energy
 
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 Russia's   invasion of Ukraine is having widespread geopolitical and economic   impacts, not the least of which can be seen in the price spike of   gas-powered grey hydrogen and ammonia compared to green versions of the   fuels.
 
 Earlier this month,   BloombergNEF published a report   suggesting “a delivered hydrogen price of $6.59/kg is now sufficient  to  make green ammonia cheaper than ‘gray' ammonia, made from unabated   natural gas on a short-run, marginal cost basis. This is just enough for   a green ammonia facility in Germany to be competitive.” Of course,   Bloomberg pointed out that prices in countries like Spain, India and   China would be even more competitive.
 
 This  week, Rystad Energy  similarly predicted that a surging cost of blue and  gray hydrogen in  line with fossil fuel hikes increased the growing  feasibility “of green  hydrogen as an affordable and secure source of  renewable energy in  Europe”.
 
 According  to Rystad, the war in Ukraine has  “turbocharged” the green hydrogen  production sector, which was already  set to experience a boom year as it  passed the 1GW milestone. Thanks to  a 70% increase, Rystad predicts the  cost of fossil fuel-linked blue  and gray hydrogen could reach from  $8/kg to $14/kg “in a matter of  days”. For green hydrogen, however,  since the invasion of Ukraine  Rystad is predicting lower production  costs of $4/kg, particularly in  Spain, which looking to produce more  than 4GW of green hydrogen by  2030.
 
 Swing support
 
 The  market is well and truly  swinging, and to add weight to that swing the  EU has already announced  plans for a €300 million funding package for  hydrogen, as well as  REPowerEU's Hydrogen Accelerator initiative to  unhook the region from  its dependence on Russian gas.
 
 Rystad  Energy's head of hydrogen  research Minh Khoi Le said “While industry  and governments are heading  in the right direction, their challenge is  to lower the risks for  green hydrogen investors and create incentives  necessary to scale up  quickly both the demand and supply. Fundamentally,  a world where green  hydrogen fulfills the role currently played by oil,  gas and coal will  look very different,” Le continued.
 
 To  realize that world green  hydrogen production needs to increase to more  than 10 million tons  worldwide by 2030 and see its costs cut to at least  $1.5/kg. 10 million  tons might sound like a lot, but according to  Rystad if green hydrogen  and its derivatives were to replace gas and  coal in Europe's power mix  base case by 2030 it would need 54 million  tons.
 
 Currently,  Europe  is working to produce 3 million tons of green hydrogen annually  by  2030, while RePower Europe has set a target of 15 million tons per   annum. Clearly, there remains an enormous gap, but the effects of   Russia's invasion of Ukraine may just have swung the economics in green   hydrogen's favor.
 
 pv-magazine.com
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