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Fortescue scraps US, Australia green hydrogen projects

  • Spanish Market: Hydrogen
  • 24/07/25

Australian iron ore miner and energy developer Fortescue will exit its planned PEM50 green hydrogen project in Australia's northeastern city of Gladstone and its 80MW hydrogen hub near Phoenix in the US state of Arizona.

An evaluation is underway to repurpose the assets and the land, the company said, with a pre-tax write down of $150mn to be recorded to cover spending on equipment and engineering works.

Fortescue flagged it would backtrack on its hydrogen ambitions in May, when it ended plans to build proton exchange membrane (PEM) electrolysers at a factory in Gladstone. Instead, it plans to develop new technologies to "deliver green molecules at scale, efficiently and cost-effectively."

The Perth-based company no longer needed to develop PEM50 as it is moving away from the technology in a strategic shift.

"We remain committed to disciplined growth, underpinned by targeted research and development that unlocks innovative solutions to drive down costs and deliver our green metals and green energy goals," Fortescue's growth and energy division chief executive Gus Pichot said on 24 July.

PHH was expected to produce 11,000 t/yr, eligible for the $3/kg 45V clean hydrogen production tax credit, Fortescue had said when making a final investment decision on it and PEM50 in 2023.

But uncertainty around US energy policy has slashed green hydrogen investments, with the Congress this month voting to hasten expiration of the 45V subsidy.

Fellow Perth-headquartered hydrogen aspirant Woodside Energy, a major LNG producer, on 23 July cancelled its green hydrogen project in the US — the 60 t/d H2OK proposal in Oklahoma.


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04/11/25

Can Cop summit help industry restore H2 momentum?

Can Cop summit help industry restore H2 momentum?

Brazil's renewable resources, sound economy and supportive policies could make it a powerful advocate for green H2, writes Pamela Machado Paris, 4 November (Argus) — The Cop 30 UN climate summit kicks off in a few days in Brazil against a backdrop of slowing global energy transition momentum and outright hostility from US president Donald Trump's administration to policies aimed at tackling climate change. Hydrogen has not been immune to these trends. Recent Cop summits have given the industry a platform to showcase its decarbonisation potential, but hydrogen is expected to receive a more modest hearing when delegates gather in Belem, reflecting the more downbeat global mood and the industry's slow development. This year has seen nothing like the level of final investment decisions (FIDs) for hydrogen projects that was anticipated at the start of 2025, as a combination of familiar issues — policy uncertainty, infrastructure bottlenecks and difficulties securing offtake agreements — have hindered progress for many schemes. The hydrogen sector is going through an "era of maturation and is moving from ambition to delivery — a transition similar to what solar, wind and battery industries have gone through as well", says Ivana Jemelkova, chief executive with lobby group the Hydrogen Council. This phase is "inevitably paired with attrition", Jemelkova tells Argus, with only projects demonstrating "the strongest business cases" able to line up enough financing and support to move forward. But Cop still offers an opportunity, she says — the "perfect place to advance practical solutions" to address challenges with mechanisms such as contracts-for-difference (CfD), national mandates and to set up "alliances to aggregate demand in sectors like fertilisers". Countries with renewable power potential — particularly emerging economies — have also used recent Cop summits to unveil clean hydrogen production ambitions, but momentum has slowed this year in regions such as Latin America and sub-Saharan Africa as companies have scaled back production goals and import ambitions . Emerging talent This is another area where Cop offers a chance for revival, Jemelkova argues. "As of 2025, 65 ... countries have a hydrogen strategy, of which 29 are emerging economies," she says. "This year's update of nationally determined contributions provides an opportunity to set detailed hydrogen targets." So far, there have been few signs that hydrogen will play a greater role in countries' plans, however, and the focus might lie elsewhere, given the sector's slower-than-expected progress. Brazil has used its presidency to promote hydrogen for clean industrialisation. It has announced several funding schemes, partnering with international bodies, including UN industrial development organisation Unido and the Green Climate Fund over the last year. But these initiatives have yet to yield any FIDs. International non-profit industry decarbonisation programme Industrial Transition Accelerator (ITA) chose Brazil as its first focus country because it combined government ambition, economic fundamentals and a promising project pipeline. ITA is working with 15 projects in Brazil and had hoped that some of these would reach FID ahead of the summit, but none is now expected this year. While projects reaching FID "would be a powerful symbolic accomplishment, if they cannot quite do so in time for the event, it is not a fundamental cause for concern", ITA says, as the programme's goal "is not just about individual FIDs", but also about overcoming systemic obstacles, such as high financing costs. Brazil's broader agenda as Cop president has included a pledge for nations to increase production and adoption of sustainable fuels, which seems likely to emphasise biofuels more than hydrogen-based alternatives. But planned Cop talks on increasing renewable power generation and integrating carbon markets into a global system should promote the uptake of hydrogen and derivatives, even if indirectly. Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

EU grants €2.9bn in ETS innovation funding


03/11/25
03/11/25

EU grants €2.9bn in ETS innovation funding

Brussels, 3 November (Argus) — The European Commission has announced grants of €2.9bn to 61 net zero decarbonisation projects using revenues from the bloc's emissions trading system (ETS). The commission said the projects will cut some 221mn t of CO2 equivalent in their first decade of operation. A total of 10 projects were selected for large-scale decarbonisation grants totalling €1.26bn, five in cement and lime, three in refineries, one in chemicals and one projected for carbon capture and storage (CCS) infrastructure. A further 19 medium-scale projects, with a capital expenditure of €20mn-100mn, received a total of €459mn. Cleantech manufacturing funding was also awarded for 12 projects in renewables, energy storage, heat pumps and hydrogen production, with a total budget of €775mn. And 23 projects received €1bn for decarbonising transport, including 10 projects for sustainable fuel production, with €153mn for four electro-sustainable aviation fuel projects, €251mn for three e-methanol maritime projects and €78mn for e-ethanol, biodiesel and bioLNG. More than 270 projects have received a cumulative €15.6bn under the innovation fund to date. A further call is expected in December. By Dafydd ab Iago Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Australia launches guarantee of origin scheme


03/11/25
03/11/25

Australia launches guarantee of origin scheme

London, 3 November (Argus) — The Australian government has today formally launched its guarantee of origin (GOO) scheme, a voluntary framework to track emissions associated with certain products as well as consumption of renewable electricity. Businesses can now register with the Clean Energy Regulator (CER) for two types of certificates. Product guarantees of origin (PGOs) will account for emissions arising from the production, transport and storage of products, starting from green hydrogen and later expanding to green metals, low-carbon liquid fuels and biomethane. Renewable guarantees of origin (Regos) will enable organisations to certify the use of power from renewable sources on a voluntary basis. The announcement follows a consultation on the new framework first opened in 2023 and an initial plan for it to be launched on 1 January 2025. Funding for the programme was then increased to A$70.4mn ($47.5mn) in May 2024, and its start date moved to the second half of 2025 . The Future Made in Australia Bill introduced in 2024 formally established the PGO and Rego schemes and the government consulted on using PGO certificates to track hydrogen and derivatives earlier this year. A difficult coexistence? Regos will eventually replace the existing large-scale generation certificates (LGCs), which will come to an end on 31 December 2030 along with mandatory renewable energy targets for liable entities. Until then, they "will overlap with the Renewable Energy Target (RET) certification scheme for five years, providing long-term certainty for renewable electricity investment and procurement", the Australian government said today. LGC prices have been on a downtrend this year, because supply has outstripped demand, with spot contracts falling from above A$30/MWh ($20/MWh) at the start of 2025 to around A$10/MWh at the end of September, according to the CER. And the price curve has overall been in steep backwardation as the RET approaches its 2030 end. Spot LGC trades were concluded at A$9.80/MWh on 31 October, with calendar year 2030 trading at A$4.75/MWh on the same day. The demand outlook for Regos looks unclear in the short-term, while they co-exist with the compliance-based LGC system, and in the longer term, once the market becomes fully voluntary after 2030, some market participants told Argus . For producers, while the option will be there in the next five years to issue either type of certificate, "it is expected LGCs will be preferred over REGOs […] as LGCs can be used for both RET obligations and voluntary surrenders, while Regos cannot be surrendered under the LRET", the CER said in its June quarterly report. An exception could be the use of time stamping, since Regos will carry additional temporal information down to the hour of power generation or dispatch. Regos can also be issued for "below-baseline" generation from facilities commissioned before 1997 — currently excluded from LGC certification — subject to restrictions, as well as for electricity exports. The panel tasked to review the National Electricity Market (NEM) earlier this year proposed a centralised mechanism to purchase Regos through auctions and contracts for difference (CfDs) based on Rego prices, in order to provide certainty for project developers around potential revenue streams. By Giulio Bajona Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Pro-transition parties have edge in Dutch poll


29/10/25
29/10/25

Pro-transition parties have edge in Dutch poll

London, 29 October (Argus) — Parties in favour of the energy transition are tipped to win more seats than anti-transition parties in the Dutch general election on Wednesday, but neither of the broad groupings look set for a majority. Polling is fragmented ahead of the election, which was sparked by the collapse of the previous coalition in June, with no party expected to win more than 15pc of seats. Polling outfit Ipso places three parties jointly in the lead, with right-wing PVV and centre-left GL-PvdA and D66 forecast to receive 23 seats each in the 150-member parliament. Following them are centre-right CDA and VVD, with 19 and 17 seats each, and right-wing JA21 on 11. The top six parties are seen winning 116 seats or 77pc of the lower house, with 10 smaller parties taking the remainder. Broadly climate-sceptic party PVV, under its leader Geert Wilders, was previously tipped to win the most seats, but remain too small to form a government. And other parties have signalled they will not form coalitions with PVV, after Wilders pulled out of the last coalition, causing it to collapse. But the party's support has fallen sharply in polling in recent weeks, opening up the field. The party supports increased domestic gas production, calls for a moratorium on new wind and solar photovoltaic and removal of some existing wind turbines. More broadly in energy policy it calls for a withdrawal from the Paris agreement on limiting global warming, and abolishing the Netherlands' CO2 tax. Its policies are similar to those advanced by smaller party JA-21, which has called for restarting gas production at Groningen, while centre-right VVD has limited explicit energy policy but agrees with the abolition of the Netherlands' CO2 tax. The three largest parties with broadly pro-transition policies, D66, GL-PvdA and CDA, are tipped to win 65 seats between them. The three are all strongly in favour of solar photovoltaics and wind energy, and broadly favour reducing the role of gas in the Dutch energy mix. All three support developing district heating to replace gas boilers, but are divided on how fast the Netherlands should move to cut gas demand. There is clear consensus almost across the board on nuclear power, favoured by five of the six likely largest parties. The outgoing caretaker government earlier this month moved to allow the 485MW Borssele, the country's sole nuclear plant, to remain open beyond 2033. Most parties expressed support for current plans to build at least two new reactors by the late 2030s, with others opting for at least four, and some pushing for the development of small modular reactors. With no individual party polling anywhere near a majority, coalition negotiations will be necessary to form a government. Negotiations took at least 200 days for each of the past three governments. By Rhys Talbot Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

South Korea mulls end to ammonia co-firing plans


29/10/25
29/10/25

South Korea mulls end to ammonia co-firing plans

Hamburg, 29 October (Argus) — South Korea is considering abandoning plans for co-firing ammonia with coal, the country's minister for climate, energy and environment Kim Sung-hwan has said. The government is reviewing a potential change in course, Kim told the Korean parliament's climate, energy, environment and labour committee today. "I think it's right to stop co-firing at coal-fired power plants," Kim said. But plans for co-firing hydrogen with natural gas will remain in place, he said. The administration of Lee Jae-myung took office in July and is doubling down on expanding renewables capacity . It wants to phase out all coal-fired power plants by 2040 which would effectively rule out co-firing of ammonia beyond the next decade. Seoul earlier this month cancelled the second round of its clean hydrogen power generation bidding market that would subsidise hydrogen and ammonia co-firing under 15-year contracts, arguably because of this policy change. The process will be relaunched at a later stage, the Korea Power Exchange said, but probably with different rules and possibly excluding ammonia co-firing. Kim acknowledged today that co-firing ammonia "does not contribute significantly to carbon reductions," even though it had featured prominently in decarbonisation and power generation plans drawn up by previous governments. Critics of ammonia and hydrogen co-firing have long pointed to limited CO2 reductions compared with other potential use cases in hard-to-abate sectors and have argued that this could extend the lifetime for heavily-polluting power plants. They have also pointed to high costs for clean hydrogen and ammonia which are exacerbated by major inefficiencies in the process. While Kim said that the government will continue to pursue hydrogen co-firing, he noted that there should be specific support mechanisms for hydrogen use in areas where it is "absolutely necessary," such as steelmaking. The focus should be on "improving domestic electrolysis technology" rather than on imports and "it is right to support it through subsidies," Kim said. By Stefan Krumpelmann Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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