The Japan Times - Japan-Australia flagship hydrogen project stumbles

EUR -
AED 4.298186
AFN 72.56231
ALL 95.475153
AMD 431.487709
ANG 2.095501
AOA 1074.39962
ARS 1629.148665
AUD 1.616199
AWG 2.10813
AZN 1.992322
BAM 1.955316
BBD 2.357707
BDT 143.693833
BGN 1.954425
BHD 0.441481
BIF 3485.122802
BMD 1.17037
BND 1.490499
BOB 8.088895
BRL 5.85478
BSD 1.170605
BTN 112.162852
BWP 16.487709
BYN 3.270407
BYR 22939.260239
BZD 2.354257
CAD 1.606
CDF 2622.800067
CHF 0.915019
CLF 0.026412
CLP 1039.488204
CNY 7.947927
CNH 7.938096
COP 4439.413967
CRC 531.947929
CUC 1.17037
CUP 31.014816
CVE 110.231604
CZK 24.299816
DJF 208.447534
DKK 7.472651
DOP 69.382833
DZD 155.099369
EGP 61.915521
ERN 17.555556
ETB 182.768789
FJD 2.559949
FKP 0.865712
GBP 0.86622
GEL 3.136335
GGP 0.865712
GHS 13.291541
GIP 0.865712
GMD 85.436664
GNF 10264.197273
GTQ 8.93079
GYD 244.896268
HKD 9.167611
HNL 31.131297
HRK 7.530981
HTG 153.286179
HUF 357.408022
IDR 20520.10458
ILS 3.399657
IMP 0.865712
INR 112.033299
IQD 1533.420592
IRR 1536696.361864
ISK 143.603407
JEP 0.865712
JMD 185.084205
JOD 0.829756
JPY 184.856476
KES 151.34049
KGS 102.348601
KHR 4696.878004
KMF 492.726365
KPW 1053.29904
KRW 1745.794831
KWD 0.360744
KYD 0.975554
KZT 554.110532
LAK 25659.103183
LBP 104824.620223
LKR 380.745794
LRD 214.216082
LSL 19.215546
LTL 3.455799
LVL 0.707945
LYD 7.430162
MAD 10.739567
MDL 20.121763
MGA 4902.682226
MKD 61.646339
MMK 2457.619954
MNT 4190.078508
MOP 9.444142
MRU 46.777426
MUR 54.852363
MVR 18.035696
MWK 2029.389207
MXN 20.12837
MYR 4.60131
MZN 74.788444
NAD 19.215546
NGN 1604.367492
NIO 43.079157
NOK 10.796106
NPR 179.456165
NZD 1.973291
OMR 0.44999
PAB 1.170585
PEN 4.001093
PGK 5.099608
PHP 72.00762
PKR 326.03733
PLN 4.237619
PYG 7133.235055
QAR 4.267035
RON 5.20582
RSD 117.383498
RUB 85.597266
RWF 1712.154425
SAR 4.399509
SBD 9.400717
SCR 16.09235
SDG 702.80427
SEK 10.914699
SGD 1.490303
SHP 0.8738
SLE 28.792583
SLL 24542.084994
SOS 669.003033
SRD 43.530755
STD 24224.304733
STN 24.493835
SVC 10.242203
SYP 129.35956
SZL 19.201167
THB 37.816422
TJS 10.938953
TMT 4.108
TND 3.410656
TOP 2.817971
TRY 53.175488
TTD 7.94783
TWD 36.895939
TZS 3044.602517
UAH 51.45911
UGX 4377.804603
USD 1.17037
UYU 46.617271
UZS 14035.167578
VES 594.623861
VND 30833.408725
VUV 138.194599
WST 3.169973
XAF 655.780735
XAG 0.013474
XAU 0.000249
XCD 3.162984
XCG 2.109669
XDR 0.813371
XOF 655.777934
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.279602
ZAR 19.201272
ZMK 10534.734585
ZMW 22.035512
ZWL 376.858798
  • RYCEF

    -0.1700

    16.03

    -1.06%

  • VOD

    0.0950

    15.605

    +0.61%

  • RELX

    0.1750

    31.795

    +0.55%

  • BTI

    0.9300

    66.28

    +1.4%

  • GSK

    0.1200

    51.13

    +0.23%

  • NGG

    0.6700

    87.65

    +0.76%

  • CMSC

    0.1498

    23.2

    +0.65%

  • CMSD

    0.0100

    23.57

    +0.04%

  • RIO

    -2.3950

    109.645

    -2.18%

  • BCE

    0.1150

    24.505

    +0.47%

  • AZN

    -2.3800

    185.34

    -1.28%

  • BP

    0.1650

    44.305

    +0.37%

  • BCC

    0.9000

    67.88

    +1.33%

  • JRI

    -0.0050

    13.125

    -0.04%

  • RBGPF

    -0.2100

    60.79

    -0.35%

Japan-Australia flagship hydrogen project stumbles
Japan-Australia flagship hydrogen project stumbles / Photo: Etienne BALMER - AFP

Japan-Australia flagship hydrogen project stumbles

Japan wants to become a hydrogen fuel leader to meet its net-zero goals, but one blockbuster project is hanging in the balance over questions about its climate credentials.

Text size:

The Hydrogen Energy Supply Chain (HESC) is billed as a billion-dollar attempt to ship liquid hydrogen from Australia to Japan.

However, cold feet about the project in Australia means HESC will source hydrogen from Japan to meet a 2030 deadline for its demonstration phase.

Hydrogen sounds promising on paper: while fossil fuels emit planet-warming greenhouse gases, burning hydrogen creates only water vapour.

But it has not yet lived up to its promise, with several much-hyped projects globally struggling to overcome high costs and engineering challenges.

Hydrogen's climate credentials also depend on how it is produced.

"Green hydrogen" uses renewable energy, while "blue hydrogen" relies on fossil fuels such as coal and gas, with carbon-capture technology to reduce emissions.

"Brown hydrogen" is produced by fossil fuels without any carbon capture.

The HESC project aims to produce blue hydrogen in the Australian state of Victoria, harnessing abundant local supplies of lignite coal.

With the world's first liquid hydrogen tanker and an imposing storage site near Kobe in Japan, HESC had been touted as a flagship experiment showcasing Japan's ambitions for the fuel.

HESC says it aims to eventually produce enough hydrogen to "reduce about 1.8 million tonnes per annum of CO2 from being released into the atmosphere".

Japan's energy sector emitted 974 million tonnes of CO2 from fuel combustion in 2022, according to the International Energy Agency (IEA).

- 'Strong opposition' -

Japan's government pledged 220 billion yen (now $1.4 billion) to HESC's current "commercial demonstration" phase, which has a completion deadline of 2030.

But to meet this deadline, the project will now source hydrogen in Japan.

That has been blamed on cold feet among Australian officials concerned about the project's environmental payoff.

A spokesman for Japan's Kawasaki Heavy Industries, one of the companies behind HESC, said the decision to shift production to Japan was taken "chiefly because of delay in procedures on the Australian side".

The Victoria government did not respond to repeated requests for comment, though Australian officials have told local media that the move was a Japanese "commercial decision".

Australia's cooling interest in the project is due to "strong opposition" from environmental activists and energy experts opposed to carbon capture and storage, said Daisuke Akimoto of Tokyo University of Information Sciences.

"The main problem the project faces is the lack of approval of the blue hydrogen project by the Victorian government," Akimoto said.

Kawasaki said it has not yet decided what type of hydrogen it will procure in Japan and downplayed the project's challenges.

"We are very positive" about HESC and "there is no change" to the goal of building a new supply chain, the spokesman said, declining to be named.

- 'Evidence gap' -

However, sourcing the hydrogen locally leaves "a critical evidence gap at the middle of the project" -- proving carbon capture and storage work -- explained David Cebon, an engineering professor at the University of Cambridge.

That is "difficult and challenging and not being done successfully anywhere", Cebon said.

Kawasaki has said it will continue "feasibility studies" for the HESC project, but Cebon believes it will "quietly die", partly because of the cost of shipping hydrogen to Japan.

To be transported by sea as a liquid, hydrogen needs to be cooled to -253 degrees Celsius (-423.4 Fahrenheit) -- an expensive, energy-intensive process.

"I think wiser heads in the government just realised how crazy it is," said Mark Ogge from the Australia Institute think-tank.

Japanese energy company Kansai Electric has separately withdrawn from a different project to produce "green" hydrogen in Australia.

A company spokesman declined to comment on reports that the decision was due to ballooning costs.

- 'It will take decades' -

Resource-poor Japan is the world's fifth largest single-country emitter of carbon dioxide.

It already produces some hydrogen domestically, mostly using natural gas and oil or nuclear power, although this is limited and expensive.

Some experts are sanguine about HESC's challenges.

Noe van Hulst, a hydrogen advisor to the IEA, said it was important to take the long view.

"Pilot projects are undertaken to test innovations in practice: learning-by-doing," he told AFP.

"Yes, it is hard to develop a low-carbon hydrogen market and it will take decades," as with wind and solar energy, van Hulst said.

Solar in particular has seen costs plummet and uptake soar far beyond initial expectations and at greater speed.

And for now, "there isn't really an alternative (to) decarbonise these hard-to-electrify sectors like steel, cement, ships and planes", van Hulst added.

K.Nakajima--JT