Hydrogen from renewable resources – the hundred year commitment.
Energy Policy, Volume 32, Issue 10, July 2004, Pages 1231-1242
Kerry-Ann Adamson. Institute for Energietechnik, Fuel Cell and Hydrogen Research Centre, Technical University of Berlin, Energy Systems, Sekr. TA8, Einsteinufer 25, 10587, Berlin, Germany.
Available online 27 May 2003.
Abstract
During the last decade interest in a potential `Hydrogen Economy' has increased
and is now discussed in main stream literature and political debates. This is
largely due to the promise that fuel cell technology, which uses a hydrogen-rich
gas, has shown. Though hydrogen can be produced from a number of sources, it is
steam reforming of natural gas that has gained a substantial support base, and
is seen as an important bridge to a sustainable hydrogen production from
renewable energy. What this paper examines is the synergy that exists now
between hydrogen from renewable resources and the inception of the fuel cell
market. It argues that although the natural gas pathway will be necessary for
the short to medium term, there should not be a complete dominance of the
production route. The paper also brings together a number of policy documents
from the EU and argues that what is needed from the level of the EU is a long
term, binding commitment to ensure that the natural gas pathway does not become
locked in.