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Hydrogen adoption will cost Europe, United States more than $1 trillion

Europe and the U.S. will have to invest in excess of $1 trillion for structure facilities to make it possible for widespread use of hydrogen fuel, an executive at Mitsubishi Heavy Industries said on Monday.

A wholesale transfer to hydrogen will require substantial new demand, which could only include financial investments in facilities to minimize the cost. European and U.S. federal governments will need to make that investment, Emmanouil Kakaras, an executive vice president at Mitsubishi said in an interview on the sidelines of CERAWeek by S&P Global energy conference.

If you count the financing to bridge the gap, you will easily get to $1 trillion, said Kakaras.

European federal governments have committed $750 billion and with the U.S. Inflation Decrease Act financing for hydrogen projects, it could be enough to make the transition to tidy fuels from fossil fuels happen, he said.

New facilities for using hydrogen in Europe will spur larger adoption by 2035, and if combined with carbon capture and storage in the U.S. to balance out greenhouse gas emissions, the energy shift might be realized, he said.

In contrast, Saudi Aramco CEO Amin Nasser at the same conference said the world would be much better off it were to focus on minimizing carbon emissions from oil and gas rather than shift to other energy sources and technologies.

The current shift technique is noticeably failing on a lot of fronts, said Nasser. In spite of its significant long term possible, hydrogen still costs in the variety of $200 to $400 per barrel of oil equivalent, while oil and gas stay much more affordable.

(source: Reuters)