Green Energy

Australia Commits $70 mn to Fast Track Renewable Hydrogen Development

The Australian Renewable Energy Agency (ARENA), on behalf of the Australian Government has announced a funding round of up to AUD 70 million to help fast track the development of renewable hydrogen in Australia.

ARENA’s hydrogen funding round is expected to play a material role in supporting commercial-scale deployments of renewable hydrogen in Australia.

Hydrogen – or carriers like ammonia – are potentially a way for Australia to export renewable energy. Electrical energy can be readily converted into hydrogen via electrolysis that separates hydrogen from oxygen in water, and when produced using renewable electricity, is entirely emissions-free.

At present, hydrogen is used in the industrial and chemical sectors and is derived primarily from natural gas. In the future, hydrogen will be used in a range of applications from industrial applications to household appliances, remote power, transport, for greening or storing energy in our existing gas network, and represents a significant long term export opportunity.

In developing the round, the agency will investigate funding for projects that involve commercial-scale deployments of electrolysers, particularly over 10 MW in scale, to drive the commercialisation of key component technologies and facilitate cost reductions for producing renewable hydrogen.

ARENA CEO Darren Miller said while Australia is in a good position to become a major exporter of renewable hydrogen, this funding will help to kickstart a domestic hydrogen industry, by driving down the cost of producing renewable hydrogen at scale.

“There is a need to develop local skills, supply chains and delivery capabilities of large scale renewable hydrogen projects. ARENA’s support can help to establish this new industry as well as progressing research and development to unlock greater cost reductions and efficiency improvements. Knowledge shared from the projects funded under this round will be vital for the industry.”

ARENA has already committed more than AUD 44 million towards hydrogen development including early-stage research and development and pilot projects. Its previous funding in renewable hydrogen includes an AUD 20 million funding round for early-stage R&D.

The agency has also supported Dyno Nobel and Queensland Nitrates to investigate creating ammonia from renewable energy, BOC to produce green hydrogen via electrolysis, Jemena to trial injecting hydrogen into the gas network, ATCO to build a hydrogen hub at their Jandakot headquarters and Toyota to build their Australian Hydrogen Centre project to produce hydrogen for both mobile and stationary applications.

Source: Saurenergy.com

Ayush Verma

Ayush is a correspondent at iamrenew.com and writes on renewable energy and sustainability. As an engineering graduate trying to find his niche in the energy journalism segment, he also works as a staff writer for saurenergy.com.

Recent Posts

India producing 920 TPD biogas with 132 CBG plants: Hardeep Singh Puri

In a major revelation, Union Minister Hardeep Singh Puri has stated that India has commissioned…

1 day ago

HPCL sets-up SAF plant at Visakh Refinery

India’s energy major Hindustan Petroleum Corporation Limited (HPCL) has commissioned a Sustainable Aviation Fuel (SAF)…

1 day ago

ViGo Bioenergy acquires Drive Systems to build largest LNG network in Belgium

Currently, Drive Systems operates five high-quality stations across Flanders, servicing key transport routes through Antwerp…

1 day ago

EU imposes Carbon Border Tax raising costs for exporters

The Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) of the European Union (EU) has come into effect…

1 day ago

RCT Hydrogen to launch 250 MW electrolyzer manufacturing from 2026

In a key development, RCT GH GmbH (RCT Hydrogen), a German manufacturer of hydrogen production…

1 day ago

Novel co-pyrolysis of biomass & plastic to produce green fuel

A scientific study has highlighted the potential of co-pyrolysing biomass and polypropylene plastic to produce…

1 day ago