Political Economy of Green Hydrogen Rollout: A Global Perspective

The present paper dwells on the role of green hydrogen in the transition towards climate-neutral economies and reviews the central challenges for its emancipation as an economically viable source of energy. The study shows that countries with a substantial share of renewables in the energy mix, adva...

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Veröffentlicht in:Sustainability 2021-12, Vol.13 (23), p.13464
1. Verfasser: Sadik-Zada, Elkhan Richard
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description The present paper dwells on the role of green hydrogen in the transition towards climate-neutral economies and reviews the central challenges for its emancipation as an economically viable source of energy. The study shows that countries with a substantial share of renewables in the energy mix, advanced natural gas pipeline infrastructure, and an advanced level of technological and economic development have a comparative advantage for the wider utilization of hydrogen in their national energy systems. The central conclusion of this review paper is that a green hydrogen rollout in the developed and oil-exporting developing and emerging countries is not a risk for the rest of the world in terms of the increasing technological disparities and conservation of underdevelopment and concomitant socio-economic problems of the Global South. The targets anchored in Paris Agreement, but even more in the EU Green Deal and the European Hydrogen Strategy will necessitate a substantial rollout of RESs in developing countries, and especially in the countries of the African Union because of the prioritization of the African continent within the energy cooperation frameworks of the EU Green Deal and the EU Hydrogen Strategy. Hence, the green hydrogen rollout will bridge the energy transition between Europe and Africa on the one hand, and climate and development targets on the other.
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source MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals
subjects Alternative energy sources
Bridges
Carbon sequestration
Chemical elements
Clean technology
Developing countries
Economic development
Economic growth
Economics
Electricity
Energy
Energy industry
Energy resources
Energy sources
Environmental policy
Fossil fuels
Fuel cells
Gas pipelines
Green hydrogen
Hydrogen-based energy
LDCs
Natural gas
Nuclear energy
Nuclear power plants
Production costs
Renewable resources
Strategy
Sustainability
Value chain
Wind power
title Political Economy of Green Hydrogen Rollout: A Global Perspective
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