A New Zealand Perspective on Hydrogen as an Export Commodity: Timing of Market Development and an Energy Assessment of Hydrogen Carriers
Abstract
:1. Introduction
The Case for Hydrogen
- An electrolyser and refuelling station at the Port of Auckland, which has plans to be a zero emissions port by 2040 [9]
- A partnership between Tuaropaki Trust and Obiyashi Corporation to demonstrate hydrogen production from geothermal electricity [10]
- Development of a refuelling network for the heavy vehicle market, and supply of left hand drive trucks from Hyzon [11]
- A partnership between Hiringa Energy and Ballance Agrinutrients to produce green ammonia from wind power derived hydrogen [12]
- Contact Energy and Meridian, two of the major electricity generators and retailers, have recently called for registrations of interest to develop the world’s largest green hydrogen plant. This is based on redirecting the approximately 600 MW of high capacity factor generation that currently supplies the aluminium smelter at Tiwai Point, due to close at the end of 2024 [13,14]
2. Development of Hydrogen Demand in Japan
2.1. Fourth Strategic Energy Plan and the Anticipated Role of Hydrogen
2.2. Forecasts of Demand Growth for Hydrogen in Japan
3. Methodology Used to Evaluate Energy Considerations of Supply Chains
3.1. Energy Balance Methodology
- Electricity required for electrolysis (but excluding transmission and distribution losses).
- Energy required for formation of the liquid carrier (electrical or thermal). Discussed on a per-carrier basis. While the formation and dissociation reactions are in principle reversible, thermal management is important as the reactions are carried out at elevated temperatures.
- Energy required for transport of the carrier from New Zealand to Japan (assumed to be from Bluff to Yokohama). The distance between ports was estimated at 6143 nm with an estimated time at sea of 17.1 days (using the tool at http://ports.com/sea-route/, accessed on 18 June 2021). An average speed of 15 knots speed was assumed based on values for oil and chemical tankers (https://www.marineinsight.com/guidelines/speed-of-a-ship-at-sea/, accessed on 18 June 2021). Note that in the case of the LH2 vessel, the boil off is used as fuel for propulsion. It is further assumed that the other carriers must be transported using green fuels, to ensure the integrity of the delivered hydrogen as a green fuel. The energy demand for shipping is added to the supply chain to that point (effectively assuming that the carrier is the most energy efficient renewable fuel at that point).
- Energy required to release the hydrogen from the carrier. Note that the end use for the hydrogen has a significant impact on this step. For example, if ammonia can be used directly in solid oxide fuel cells or in gas turbines, then there is no need to dissociate the ammonia. However, if the end use is for FCV then strict quality constraints will apply as traces of ammonia can poison fuel cell catalysts, and the hydrogen needs to be compressed to appropriate pressures for onboard storage. This is discussed in greater detail in the next section.
3.2. Electrical Energy Required for Electrolysis
4. Data and Analysis of Individual Carriers
4.1. Liquid Hydrogen (LH2)
4.2. Ammonia
4.3. MCH
5. Discussion and Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Application | Consumption [20] | 2030 Targets Vehicles/Units [19] | Demand (tpa) |
---|---|---|---|
FC Bus | 4600 kg/year | 1200 | 5520 |
FCV | 94 kg/year | 800,000 | 78,400 |
Ene-Farm 1 | 201 kg/year | 53,000,000 | 1,065,300 |
1 GW thermal PS 2 | 300,000,000 kg/year | N/A |
Property | Liquid H2 | Ammonia, NH3 | MCH |
---|---|---|---|
Boiling point (°C) | −252.9 | −33.3 | 101 |
Hydrogen density (wt%) | 100 | 17.8 | 6.16 |
Hydrogen density (kg/m3) | 70.9 | 121 | 47.1 |
H2 release temp. (°C) | −252.9 | 350–900 | 200–400 |
Regeneration temp. (°C) | N/A | 400–600 | 100–200 |
H2 release enthalpy change (kJ/molH2) | 0.899 | 30.6 | 67.5 |
Lower heating value, LHV (MJ/kg) | 120 | 18.6 | N/A |
Other properties | Highly combustible, Explosive, cryogenic liquid | Acute toxicity, Corrosive | Flammable, Irritant |
Reference | Current Consumption | Future |
---|---|---|
Krasae-in et al., 2010 [30] | 10 to 15 | 5 (target) |
Watanabe et al., 2010 [31] | 13.4 | 6.7 |
Ohlig and Decker, 2014 [32] | 11.9 | 6 (target) |
Kamiya et al., 2015 [29] | 11.1 | |
Cardella et al., 2017 [33] | 12.5 to 15 | 5.9–6.6 (model) |
Heuser et al., 2019 [21] | 12 to 15 | 6.78 1 |
Step | LHV Efficiency | Energy Intensity, kWh/kg H2 | Retained Energy, LHV (MWh) |
---|---|---|---|
Generation | 100 | ||
Electrolysis | 70.0% | 47.6 | 70 |
Formation | 82.7% | 10.0 | 57.9 |
Shipping | 96.6% | 2.0 | 55.9 |
Release 1 | 104.9% | −2.8 | 58.7 |
Total | 58.5% | 56.8 | |
LHV (kWh/kg) | 33.3 |
Step | LHV Efficiency | Energy Intensity, kWh/kg NH3 | Energy Intensity, kWh/kg H2 | Retained Energy, LHV (MWh) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Generation | 100 | |||
Electrolysis | 70.0% | 8.5 | 47.6 | 70 |
Formation | 66.7% | 2.6 | 23.8 | 46.7 |
Shipping | 95.3% | 0.54 | 3.5 | 44.5 1 |
Release 2 | 70.0% | 5.0 | 32.1 | 31.2 |
Total | 31.2% | 16.6 | 107.0 | |
LHV (kWh/kg) | 5.17 | 33.33 |
Step | LHV Efficiency | Energy Intensity, kWh/kg H2 | Retained Energy, LHV (MWh) |
---|---|---|---|
Generation | 100 | ||
Electrolysis | 70.0% | 47.6 | 70 |
Formation | 65.0% | 25.6 | 45.5 |
Shipping | 94.6% | 4.2 | 43.0 |
Release 1 | 64.4% | 42.8 | 27.7 |
Total | 27.7% | 120.2 |
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Hinkley, J.T. A New Zealand Perspective on Hydrogen as an Export Commodity: Timing of Market Development and an Energy Assessment of Hydrogen Carriers. Energies 2021, 14, 4876. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14164876
Hinkley JT. A New Zealand Perspective on Hydrogen as an Export Commodity: Timing of Market Development and an Energy Assessment of Hydrogen Carriers. Energies. 2021; 14(16):4876. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14164876
Chicago/Turabian StyleHinkley, James T. 2021. "A New Zealand Perspective on Hydrogen as an Export Commodity: Timing of Market Development and an Energy Assessment of Hydrogen Carriers" Energies 14, no. 16: 4876. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14164876
APA StyleHinkley, J. T. (2021). A New Zealand Perspective on Hydrogen as an Export Commodity: Timing of Market Development and an Energy Assessment of Hydrogen Carriers. Energies, 14(16), 4876. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14164876