Dr. Matteo Gazzani | Utrecht University

Green Hydrogen: From Production to Industry Applications and Technological Advancements - Insights from energy system modelling

Hydrogen is projected to play a pivotal role in achieving a net-zero world. However, today hydrogen production is a CO2 intensive process, accounting for about 2% of global CO2 emissions. Clearly, we cannot scale up towards a hydrogen economy by continuing with greenhouse gas-emitting processes. The technologies required to produce low-carbon hydrogen, i.e., reforming with CO2 capture as well as water electrolysis, are available today at the required commercial scale. However, the large-scale production of low-carbon hydrogen is hindered by system limitations, notably the unavailability of CO2 transport and storage networks for the former and insufficient renewable electricity for the latter. Furthermore, without widespread carbon-neutral H2 production, there is a corresponding lack of demand, leading to a mutually reinforcing barrier. Energy system studies, which integrate the analysis of various technologies alongside electricity and gas networks, as well as other relevant industrial processes, play a crucial role in providing possible optimal deployment strategies and resolving the intricate interplay between supply and demand dynamics. Moreover, when technologies are adequately represented, system studies offer important insights on the required performance of new technologies, for example on the necessary technical parameters or on the costs that make them viable.

In this keynote, I will touch upon a few topics in this domain. I will start discussing the potential role of green hydrogen to reduce emissions, costs and curtailed energy in the North Sea region (onshore and offshore) as projected in the year 2030 based on the ENTSO-E 10-years network development plan. Investment into electrolyzer, hydrogen storage and hydrogen pipelines (new and repurposed) will be compared with non-hydrogen scenarios, and will therefore provide a quantitative evaluation on the role of hydrogen as enabler of cross-sector coupling. After this, I will discuss the feasibility and cost-effectiveness of integrating electrolysers into existing ammonia production processes, and compare alternative options, such as electric steam methane reformer with carbon capture. I will discuss critical thresholds where electrolysers become a preferred option for hydrogen production in ammonia synthesis. Finally, I will discuss the role of energy system modelling in supporting electrochemical technology development, in particular fuel cells and electrolysers.

Biography

Dr. Matteo Gazzani is associate professor at the Copernicus Institute of Sustainable Development, Utrecht University, and (part-time) at the Chemical Engineering and Chemistry Department, TU Eindhoven. He received his BSc and MSc in Energy Engineering from Politecnico di Milano. He obtained his Ph.D. cum laude in Energy and Nuclear Sciences and Technologies from the same university. Prior joining Utrecht University, he was a postdoctoral fellow at ETH Zurich. His overarching goal is to facilitate and speed up the transition to a climate neutral society, pursued via cutting-edge research in energy and process systems and inspiring education at bachelor and master level. His research focuses on understanding and improving energy processes and systems by means of mathematical modelling and optimization of the underlying physical phenomena. It integrates the technical perspective from chemical and mechanical engineering with the system level analysis, where the benefits of new technologies on the society can be reaped. This multi-disciplinary methodology allows to bridge fundamental sciences to the process and system level, therefore investigating unexplored interfaces.

Utrecht University, Copernicus Institute of Sustainable Development, Princetonlaan , Princetonlaan 8a, 3584 CB Utrecht, Netherlands
Eindhoven University of Technology, Sustainable Process Engineering, Chemical Engineering and Chemistry, Eindhoven 5612 AP, Netherlands