Main content

Hydrogen: A climate game-changer?

Governments turn to green hydrogen in attempts to meet their climate change commitments.

With less than six months to go before the next big climate conference (COP26) in Scotland, the world's major polluters are under pressure to significantly increase their ability to cut greenhouse gas emissions. One of the solutions being discussed is to increase the production of clean hydrogen. At present most of the world's hydrogen has a high carbon footprint, but engineers are coming up with innovative ways to produce the gas with the help of renewable energy. They say it will allow for a faster reduction of carbon emissions without the need to overhaul existing industrial infrastructure. It’s also claimed that hydrogen-powered cells can drastically cut pollution from aviation and transportation.

But others argue that using large amounts of wind and solar power to create ‘green hydrogen’ is wasteful and that governments should instead focus on improving the supply of renewables. So how clean can hydrogen get and how valuable could it be in the fight against climate change? Will the high costs involved in developing the industry pay off in the long run, or does the technology give us all false hope? Ritula Shah and a panel of experts discuss the role of hydrogen in attempts to cut greenhouse gas emissions.

Available now

50 minutes

Last on

Sat 26 Jun 2021 03:06GMT

Contributors

Rachel Fakhry - Policy analyst in the Climate and Clean Energy Programme at the Natural Resources Defense Council in Washington DC

Mike Kelland - CEO of Planetary Hydrogen, a company based in Canada which produces hydrogen while taking carbon dioxide out of air

Nina Skorupska - Chief executive of the REA, the UK’s largest renewables and clean technology trade association

Ralf Ott - Head of policy and regulation at Hydrogenious, a German company that develops LOHC (Liquid Organic Hydrogen Carrier) technology

Photo

A worker demonstrates the refuelling of a hydrogen fuel cell powered forklift truck made by Toyota, in Yokohama, Japan. Credit: Getty Images

Broadcasts

  • Fri 25 Jun 2021 09:06GMT
  • Fri 25 Jun 2021 23:06GMT
  • Sat 26 Jun 2021 03:06GMT

Featured in...

The Real Story Podcast

Subscribe via your favourite podcast app...

Podcast