To support the United States’ efforts to address global climate change and strengthen our energy security, the Department of Energy last week released the nation’s first Clean Hydrogen Strategy and Roadmap, which aims to increase domestic clean hydrogen production by 400% in 20 years, from 10 million metric tons produced annually by 2030 to 50 million metric tons by 2050.

This will be no small feat, considering that 95% of hydrogen now produced in the U.S. is made primarily from natural gas, which results in the release of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.

For many, producing hydrogen from renewable energy sources such as wind and solar is the long-term goal. With the technologies and infrastructure available today, however, this method is the most expensive, costing almost five times as much as producing hydrogen from natural gas. These facts suggest it is unrealistic to rely exclusively on renewables to meet the ambitious 2050 production and net-zero targets.

Instead, we must do exactly what the road map prescribes and “support opportunities for hydrogen production from diverse energy, including fossil fuels with carbon capture and storage (CCS).”

The Inflation Reduction Act, passed last summer by Congress, confirmed that CCS will likely be an important part of the U.S. approach to mitigating climate change — a confirmation welcomed by environmental and energy justice advocates, labor unions, industry, academia, national laboratories, and federal, state and local governments that informed the Department of Energy’s strategy, which rightly notes that numerous domestic CCS projects are already “putting the United States on the global map in terms of hydrogen deployment.”

CCS is necessary to produce and deploy clean hydrogen at scale, but more is needed to accelerate the deployment of this game-changing technology to meet the administration’s 2050 production targets and net-zero goals.

Most urgently, the Biden administration needs to address the Environmental Protection Agency’s permitting backlog of Class VI carbon storage wells. These wells are necessary to store the large amounts of carbon dioxide that will need to be captured if the U.S. is to leverage its natural energy resources, such as natural gas,

Published on  | Carbon in medias | Online source

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