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Air Products to build blue hydrogen plant in Louisiana

  • Spanish Market: Hydrogen
  • 14/10/21

Air Products plans to invest $4.5bn to produce blue hydrogen in Louisiana, providing the low-carbon fuel to oil refiners along its US Gulf coast pipeline.

The project in Ascension Parish will produce 750mn cf/d (21 m³/d) of hydrogen from natural gas when completed in 2026, Air Products said today. The project will capture 95pc of CO² emissions from the hydrogen production process, or about 5mn metric tonnes/yr of CO², for permanent sequestration one mile underground, making it the world's largest carbon capture and storage project, the company said.

The plant will join about two dozen conventional hydrogen plants and a blue hydrogen plant in Port Arthur, Texas, feeding the company's 1.9bn cf/d pipeline network stretching more than 700 miles from Texas City, Texas, to New Orleans, Louisiana. Oil refiners along the pipeline use hydrogen to remove impurities such as sulphur from fuels.

Some of the plant's blue hydrogen also will be used to make blue ammonia for global distribution. The delivered ammonia can be converted back to blue hydrogen for fueling buses and trucks, among other markets.

The project is Air Products' biggest US investment ever, reflecting rising interest in low-carbon hydrogen as companies and governments commit to cutting greenhouse gas emissions. Air Products, already the world's largest hydrogen producer, said it will become the world's top producer of blue hydrogen with the completion of the Louisiana project and a previously announced project in Alberta, Canada.

The company said it also will be the global leader in green hydrogen — which is produced via electrolysis using renewable power— with its recently announced $5bn joint venture in Neom, Saudi Arabia.

Louisiana has approved Air Products' plan to store captured CO² from the blue hydrogen project at multiple inland sequestration sites along a pipeline corridor extending 35 miles east of the plant.


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US DOE cancels H2 hub community meetings: Update


05/02/25
05/02/25

US DOE cancels H2 hub community meetings: Update

Updates with comment from California hydrogen hub Houston, 5 February (Argus) — The US Department of Energy (DOE) has canceled meetings between planned hydrogen hubs and the public, casting further uncertainty over how the multibillion-dollar ventures will proceed as the administration of President Donald Trump pauses clean energy initiatives. California's Alliance for Renewable Clean Hydrogen Energy Systems (Arches) has informed members of the hub's Community Benefits Workgroup that it was canceling a meeting scheduled for 13 February. "In accordance with the recent Department of Energy memo issued last week, mandating that we stop all community benefits-related work, we will be pausing our biweekly Hub-level Community Benefits calls as we work with DOE to evaluate how this guidance affects Arches' community engagement strategy moving forward," Arches said in an email seen by Argus . Arches is one of seven proposed regional hydrogen production hubs around the US that were designated by former president Joe Biden to receive billions of dollars in federal funding. A total of about $170mn was announced last year and in early January to be paid out as first tranches of government funding to the seven hubs to initiate planning and development activities. The status of those payments and future disbursements have been thrown into doubt since Trump ordered a pause on payments related to the Inflation Reduction Act, an executive decision that a judge then ordered temporarily halted . Arches continues to work during a temporary pause in community engagement meetings, Arches chief executive Angelina Galiteva said in an email to Argus . "We recognize that programmatic reviews are a standard part of administrative transitions and remain confident in the ongoing progress of Phase 1 activities," said Galiteva. Community organizers in the northeast that have protested the Mid-Atlantic Clean Hydrogen Hub (Mach2) were also notified that an upcoming webinar hosted by the DOE's Office of Clean Energy Demonstrations about Phase 1 funding awards have been canceled. "We are postponing this briefing until further notice," said an e-mail sent out to those who had registered for the 13 February briefing. By Jasmina Kelemen Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Spain calls for cautious transposition of EU H2 package


05/02/25
05/02/25

Spain calls for cautious transposition of EU H2 package

Madrid, 5 February (Argus) — Spain must be cautious in its transposition of EU hydrogen legislation, according to the country's recently appointed secretary of state for energy Joan Groizard. "We can do this in a hurry and meet the formal requirements or we can do it in a way that we roll out the legislative framework [that] renewable hydrogen really needs in this country," Groizard said at the Second National Green Hydrogen Congress in Huelva. The EU has set a May deadline for member states to transpose the Renewable Energy Directive RED III into national laws. Trade association Hydrogen Europe's chief policy and market officer Daniel Fraile said many countries are "quite delayed" in this process. Spain still has lots of "homework to do" in transposing EU directives related to hydrogen and wishes to "share it with everyone," through sector participation, according to Groizard. Part of the "homework" that EU member states need to complete by May includes firm targets for hydrogen demand for transport and industry in 2030, which the bloc's Directorate-General for Energy broadly estimates at 3mn-6mn t/yr. The European Commission Energy Platform Task Force's Carlos Alvarez Aguilera said these, together with the support provided by RED III targets for renewable fuels of non-biological origin (RFNBOs) to make up 1pc of the final consumption of energy and 1.2pc of marine fuels by 2030, will provide "certainty to investors" that renewable hydrogen is a "tangible reality." Other EU directives that form part of the EU legislative package concerning hydrogen and that require transposition include the fourth renewable gas package, which must brought in by member states by August 2026. By Jonathan Gleave Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

S Korea to invest $89.5mn in net zero, energy security


05/02/25
05/02/25

S Korea to invest $89.5mn in net zero, energy security

Singapore, 5 February (Argus) — South Korea today announced plans to invest 129.3bn won ($89.5mn) this year in new research and development projects in the energy sector, to achieve carbon neutrality and ensure domestic energy security. About W78.7bn will go to 41 projects in the first round of funding this year. These projects will focus on technologies related to "carbon-free" energy such as renewable energy, nuclear power, and hydrogen, among others, South Korea's energy ministry (Motie) said on 5 February. The ministry will also invest W46.2bn to improve energy efficiency and in power systems, especially given surging power demand driven by artificial intelligence. Motie also plans to invest W56.9bn in securing technologies such as next-generation solar power, flexible operation of nuclear power plants, and large-capacity water electrolysis facilities, to "respond to the climate crisis". South Korea's science ministry in December 2024 unveiled plans to invest W2.75 trillion in technologies this year to respond to climate change, which included renewable energy technology and "carbon-free" technologies like nuclear power. It is unclear if the latest W56.9bn commitment is part of the W2.75 trillion announced last year or a separate investment. South Korea in December 2024 also announced plans to invest W450 trillion won in green finance by 2030, then acting president and prime minister Han Duck-soo said before he was impeached later that week . This made deputy prime minister and finance minister Choi Sang-mok the current acting president and acting prime minister. President Yoon Suk Yeol was impeached on 14 December and has since been arrested. If Yoon is removed or resigns, a presidential election must be held within 60 days, instead of the original election date in 2027. By Tng Yong Li Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Q&A: Norway’s Scatec targets rare H2 demand ‘pockets’


04/02/25
04/02/25

Q&A: Norway’s Scatec targets rare H2 demand ‘pockets’

London, 4 February (Argus) — Norwegian renewables developer Scatec is pursuing opportunities in hydrogen production, particularly in the Middle East. The firm in 2023 quit a joint venture in Oman, but is progressing in Egypt and has secured an offtaker in Germany's state-backed H2Global auction initiative. Chief executive Terje Pilskog shared his views on the state of the hydrogen industry in the Middle East and the company's approach to near-term challenges. Edited highlights follow: Has the outlook for renewable hydrogen shifted in the past 12-18 months? There is more realism about the industry's growth rate, but the fundamentals haven't changed — green hydrogen is still important for decarbonising several industries. But clearly the pace is slower than expected and we must recognise there was some hype. In the end, securing offtake drives projects forward. Demand is moving significantly slower than what was assumed a couple of years ago. Delivery time for the first H2Global project is late 2027, and for larger projects towards 2030 is more realistic. Why did Scatec exit Oman, which others consider the place to be? Oman has the key requirements for producing green hydrogen and ammonia competitively, and its government has enabled development. But not much can happen, as most companies won't take final investment decisions (FIDs) without offtake deals. There's a lot of support from the authorities, but massive greenfield projects are complicated, with infrastructure for hydrogen, ammonia and shipping needed. When we pulled out of the project we were involved in, it was because we didn't see the demand coming. And we didn't feel comfortable with the timelines relative to when we expected to see demand coming in. Why did Scatec advance its project in Egypt? We've been in Egypt a long time and we are familiar with the country and the regulation. Egypt has mostly the same fundamentals as Oman, like available land and great renewable resources — even better wind conditions. Egypt is nicely located if green ammonia is used as marine fuel and because it is near Europe as an offtaker. The good thing about Egypt is its existing ammonia industry, with 3-4 large facilities. Our logic was that — because demand was coming slowly — in Egypt we could build incrementally at a scale that is possible to secure offtake. And the required investment would be lower because the ammonia export facility already has storage and port infrastructure. To be completely greenfield, you must target 700,000-1mn t/yr of green ammonia to be cost-competitive. Our joint project with Fertiglobe is for 70,000-75,000 t/yr — relatively small compared with the volumes people have talked about, but still of a size where it's possible to get offtake. The project secured an award from the H2Global tender last year, so now we are completing the FEED and financing, and we plan to reach FID in the first half of 2025. The capital costs are $0.5bn — not as much as everybody dreamed, but still sizeable. We are building 300MW of renewables and 100MW of electrolysis, so it's still going to be among the largest projects in 2027-28. What are Scatec's priorities over the next 12-24 months? We are developing a similar project at Damietta on the north coast of Egypt with Mopco and Echem that is 2-2.5 times larger. We have signed heads of terms with Yara and we aim to conclude the deal over the next 6-12 months so the project can move forward. We have focused very narrowly over the past two years to ensure these two projects succeed. We have been asked by countries to start development. It's the usual suspects, especially in north Africa. You have fundamentals for green hydrogen in Morocco, in Tunisia — countries that we know. Those are candidates. But my perspective is that the train, on a global basis, is not leaving the station. If we get to the FID stage on the first two projects, with the competence we are building we're going to have other opportunities. That does not mean that we wait until 2027 to do anything else, but it's clear what our first, second and third priorities are at this time. Do you like the land allocation model of countries such as Oman and Morocco? Each country has its own approach. From a developer's point of view, auctioning land is a bit challenging, as it adds costs, especially if you pay up-front. You might take two years before FID and a lot can happen in two years, so it's challenging to take on that exposure up-front. But it sets a certain standard in terms of who can participate, and if you want to attract the big guys, those are the ones that have the capability to go for that kind of opportunity. These are big projects, so it's important to screen a bit. But from my point of view, the key thing is creating the optimal framework for projects in your country. That's about making sure infrastructure is in place, things move quickly and projects are cost-competitive. It is a competition, as everybody in this region wants to become a green hydrogen hub. What H2 infrastructure should the Middle East region prioritise? Port facilities — storage and loading. It can be bunkering facilities, if you believe it could be a significant fuel for the marine industry. Enabling production near ports is important. The other factor is electricity infrastructure. Our project in Egypt needs grid availability, but others operate in ‘island mode'. Many countries in the region need more renewable energy, and you can end up with hydrogen facilities competing with other initiatives. So thinking through how to provide stable renewable electricity is important. Investors need plans to be clear, predictable and actually implemented. Our experience in Egypt is good. The authorities are implementing structures and regulations that enable us to advance projects. What is your biggest ask from governments? What is holding back development today is not the possibility of doing projects. It's the demand side. As long as it is free to emit CO2, it will be difficult to close the gap between green and grey hydrogen. It might be wishful thinking, but a global price for emitting CO2 would be ideal. Regional CO2 pricing is helpful and creates demand in pockets. But it adds costs for that region, which — from a global competition perspective — is not good. Europe's H2Global mechanism is helpful to cover the difference. There might be other pockets, like dual-fuel engine ships that can run partly on clean fuels. Obviously, you need global regulation, as companies cannot move alone. But for end consumers, transporting a pair of sneakers on a ship that uses green ammonia adds insignificant cost. Wouldn't customers for Tesla cars want them transported to Europe in an environmentally-friendly way? And they aren't the most price-sensitive. So, while you cannot do it on a global basis, there are pockets where you can start. How could the change of US administration impact hydrogen? It's a bit difficult. President Trump will not do anything that hurts American business, and climate is far down on his list of priorities. He will support hydrogen to the extent that it benefits US companies to be at the forefront of an industry, but he will not implement specific things in the US. That puts the US hydrogen industry at a disadvantage relative to the rest of the world. He will not lead the change with the US in front. Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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