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Hydrogen 'can' replace natural gas in race to Net Zero

Engineers back the move as five professional bodies unite to release new report

A new report, led by the Institution of Engineering and Technologyhas, has concluded hyrodgen could replace natural gas in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ National Grid gas network.(Image: Grimsby Telegraph)

Leading º£½ÇÊÓÆµ engineers have confirmed hydrogen can safely replace natural gas in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s grid - significantly contributing to the 2050 Net Zero target.

Technical professionals at the top of their fields have assessed the possibility, with a large scale processing plant part of ambitious plans to push the Humber towards an even earlier goal, combining with carbon capture and storage at regional power station Drax.

Natural gas is now one of the largest sources of carbon emissions. A total of 85 per cent of homes iue it for heating and cooking, with more than 50 per cent of energy consumed by industry reliant, alongside 40 per cent of our electricity.  It has been seen as the low cost option to turn to for rapid firing when renewables cannot produce, with nuclear and biomass as base loads.

The key feature of hydrogen is that when combusted it produces no carbon emissions and is therefore a low carbon alternative to natural gas.

Detailed in a new, Institution of Engineering and Technology-led report, experts from five professional engineering institutions were tasked by government to assess the engineering risks and uncertainties around using hydrogen in homes, businesses and industry as a future low carbon fuel.

What a carbon capture pipeline could look like in the Humber region.(Image: Drax Group)

 

Lead author, Dr Robert Sansom of the IET’s energy policy panel, said: “We are now in a position to seriously consider the viability of using hydrogen in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s gas grid for use by homes and businesses which could significantly contribute to the decarbonisation of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s energy sector.

“Hydrogen has not been deployed at scale anywhere in the world and so any proposal will need to compensate for this lack of experience. Our report identifies key risks and uncertainties such as ensuring that we understand the impact on the public from a transition to hydrogen and can minimise any disruption that arises. We know hydrogen produces no carbon emissions when burned but it is also important to fully investigate and understand the overall environmental impact a switch to hydrogen is likely to make.

“It’s fundamental that these areas as well as others identified in the report are comprehensively addressed before a programme of large-scale deployment is considered.”