Multimedia Library
Resources: Washington DC Briefing on the State of the Hydrogen Economy
10th October 2019
The Institute’s US office recently hosted a discussion on the State of the Global Hydrogen Economy exploring questions such as: What is the nexus of renewables and carbon capture in decarbonizing hydrogen production? How can we harness the urgent need to deploy carbon capture and storage (CCS) along with existing policy incentives to catalyze the hydrogen economy?
The discussion was led by Steinar Eikaas, VP Low Carbon Solutions, Equinor, as keynote speaker on behalf of the Hydrogen Council followed by an expert panel consisting of: Patrick Molloy, Senior Associate, Rocky Mountain Institute; Mark Ackiewicz, Director, CCUS Division, US Department of Energy; Mike Fowler, Director, Advanced Clean Energy Research, Clean Air Task Force and; the Institute’s own Senior Advisor Lee Beck. Here are the slides and key resources discussed during the event:
- Slides - Steinar Eikaas, VP Low Carbon Solutions, Equinor & Hydrogen Council
- Slides – Patrick Molloy, Senior Associate, Rocky Mountain Institute
- Slides – Mark Ackiewicz, Director, CCUS Division, DOE
- Slides – Lee Beck, Senior Advisor, Global CCS Institute
- Slides – Mike Fowler, Director, Advanced Clean Energy Research, Clean Air Task Force
- Energy Transitions Commissions’s Mission Possible Report
- Institute’s Recommendation for Australia’s Hydrogen Production
- California’s LCFS: A Guide for Policymakers and Project Developers
- International Energy Agency: The Future of Hydrogen
- DOE’s Hydrogen Website
- Brad Page in WEF: Hydrogen isn’t the fuel of the future. It’s already here.
- Lee Beck in Bloomberg: Hydrogen May be the next Clean Energy Game Changer
- Wabash Valley CCS project
- Clean Air Task Force: Fuels without Carbon
- UK Climate Change Committee: Hydrogen in a Low-Carbon Economy
- Imperial College: Analysis of Alternative UK Heat Decarbonization Pathways
- Hydrogen supply chain technoeconomic analysis
- Report on behalf of BEIS UK: Economic and engineering challenges of appliance replacements