New Inquiry: The role of hydrogen in achieving Net
Zero
A key component of the Government's recently announced ‘Ten Point
Plan for a Green Industrial Revolution’ is 'Driving the
Growth of Low Carbon Hydrogen'. The plan outlined a range of
measures to support the development and adoption of hydrogen,
including a £240 million 'Net Zero Hydrogen Fund'. Noting this,
and the further £81 million allocated for hydrogen heating trials
in the 2020
Spending Review, the House of Commons Science and Technology
Committee is today launching a new inquiry into the role
of hydrogen in achieving Net Zero.
Following recommendations from the
Committee on Climate Change that the Government develop a
strategy for hydrogen use and should aim for largescale hydrogen
trials to begin in the early 2020s, the Committee seeks to ensure
that the Government's intended plan will be suitable and
effective. The Committee will also assess the
infrastructure required for hydrogen as a Net Zero fuel, and
examine progress made so far internationally to determine the
viability of hydrogen as a significant contributor to achieving
Net Zero.
Chair of the House of Commons Science and Technology
Committee, Rt Hon MP, said:
"Hydrogen may have a big role to play in achieving Net
Zero. Its potential provides an important opportunity for UK
science and industry to develop and apply the technologies that
will support its use—from the production of hydrogen without
contributing to CO2 emissions to its use across the
economy. Our inquiry will establish what needs to be done for the
UK to play a leading global role in the development and
deployment of hydrogen technologies, making use of our strengths
and depth of experience in science, engineering and
innovation."
The Committee is seeking written submissions by Friday 8
January addressing any or all of the following topics:
- The suitability of the Government’s announced plans for
“Driving the Growth of Low Carbon Hydrogen”, including:
- the focus, scale and timescales of the proposed measures;
- how the proposed measures—and any other recommended
measures—could best be co-ordinated;
- the dependency of the Government’s proposed plans on carbon
capture and storage, any risks associated with this and how any
risks should be mitigated; and
- potential business models that could attract private
investment and stimulate widespread adoption of hydrogen as a
Net Zero fuel;
- The progress of recent and ongoing trials of hydrogen in the
UK and abroad, and the next steps to most effectively build on
this progress;
- The engineering and commercial challenges associated with
using hydrogen as a fuel, including production, storage,
distribution and metrology, and how the Government could best
address these;
- The infrastructure that hydrogen as a Net Zero fuel will
require in the short- and longer-term, and any associated risks
and opportunities;
- Cost-benefit analysis of using hydrogen to meet Net Zero as
well as the potential environmental impact of technologies
required for its widespread use; and
- The relative advantages and disadvantages of hydrogen
compared to other low-carbon options (such as electrification or
heat networks), the applications for which hydrogen should be
prioritised and why, and how any uncertainty in the optimal
technology should be managed.
The Committee values diversity and seeks to ensure this where
possible. The Committee encourages members of underrepresented
groups to submit written evidence.