Mr. Dazzle wrote: ↑Sat Sep 17, 2022 1:29 pmIt's inevitably gonna be more expensive though if you're using electricity to make it. Making hydrogen with electricity and water introducse a bunch of efficiency losses (quite big ones I'd guess), then you have to physically move something in tanks, pipes etc. which uses more energy, then there are even more efficiency losses (higher than those associated with electrical devices) when you burn it to do the useful work you actually want to do.
As a way of moving energy about, which is what you're actually doing here, it's always gonna have loads more losses than 'pure' electricity and hence will end up costing more. Which is why I say it'll be niche, used in either applications where you
can't use electricity because of infrastructure or similar limitations, or where it's cheaper in the interim - converting old stuff, rather than building new.
It takes about 4kWh to produce c.3kWh of electricity -> hydrogen equivalent energy.
There's then the efficiency of making use of that energy.
Hydrogen fuel cells are efficient but very expensive. Gas turbine electricity generators are fairly cheap but not all that efficient although for elec with CHP it can be over 90% efficient...if you can use both the electric and the heat.
I think storage is going to be absolutely crucial, and massive.
We're talking about having 50GW offshore wind, 24GW nuke, 70GW solar and there's already 14GW of onshore wind.
Current [sic] UK demand is around 30GW.
Even with smart grids there's going to be some pretty big differences between supply and demand, both ways and seeing as we're not having a nice switch it off or on CCGT (or maybe we will for the real dark/still days) we'll need somewhere/something to pump all that power into.
Unless batteries really do have a massive leap of tech, probably hydrogen electrolysis is going to be a pretty big part of that.
As for pumping water, planning permission has already been granted to spend probably over £1bn putting a 4th wall around a local corrie.
That's only 1.5GW though.