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Q&A: Investing in hydrogen: building a new economy

Hydro­gen is key to the UK achiev­ing net zero by 2030. Deloitte’s Daniel Grosvenor, UK renew­ables leader and author of Invest­ing in hydro­gen: Ready, set net zero, and Nick Pri­or, glob­al head of infra­struc­ture and cap­i­tal projects, dis­cuss how to estab­lish a hydro­gen econ­o­my


Pro­mot­ed by

Deloitte

Daniel Grosvenor, UK renewables leader and author of Investing in hydrogen: Ready, set net zero, and Nick Prior, global head of infrastructure and capital projects
Daniel Grosvenor, UK renew­ables leader and author of Invest­ing in hydro­gen: Ready, set net zero, and Nick Pri­or, glob­al head of infra­struc­ture and cap­i­tal projects

Why hydrogen? What role can it play in the UK reaching net zero by 2050?

DG: Hydro­gen has the poten­tial to replace nat­ur­al gas in heat­ing and indus­tri­al process­es and petrol and diesel for hard-to-elec­tri­fy trans­port. Domes­tic gas boil­ers can be shift­ed to hydro­gen using the exist­ing or an upgrad­ed net­work to cre­ate a hydro­gen grid. If that’s achieved, then hydro­gen will play a sig­nif­i­cant role in achiev­ing net zero. How­ev­er, most hydro­gen is made from nat­ur­al gas and there­fore this sce­nario is depen­dent on car­bon cap­ture and stor­age to deliv­er a low-car­bon solu­tion, known as blue hydro­gen. Our analy­sis shows blue hydro­gen is sig­nif­i­cant­ly cheap­er than green, which uses renew­able ener­gy and elec­trol­y­sis to pro­duce hydro­gen. But we are like­ly to need both to deliv­er net zero.

How can the cost of the technology be driven down?

DG: Inno­va­tion can dri­ve the cost down, increas­ing effi­cien­cies and the eco­nom­ics. Ulti­mate­ly, we need to build at scale. The off­shore wind sec­tor is a suc­cess because it installed thou­sands of tur­bines and con­tin­u­al­ly made the process more effi­cient each time with incre­men­tal inno­va­tion. The same is need­ed for hydro­gen.

NP: Part of that falling cost has been the cost of cap­i­tal. Investors are des­per­ate to com­pete, there­fore the cap­i­tal ploughed into off­shore wind is much cheap­er now than it was at the begin­ning. Sim­i­lar­ly, the cost of gov­ern­ment and pri­vate sec­tor bor­row­ing for cap­i­tal expen­di­ture has nev­er been low­er and is like­ly to stay that way for the next few years.

Besides solid business and market frameworks, how else can the government incentivise investment in low-carbon infrastructure such as hydrogen?

DG: A pos­si­bil­i­ty is a work­able car­bon tax. Some esti­mates sug­gest a car­bon price needs to be as high as €200 a tonne to make projects eco­nom­i­cal­ly viable under a net-zero envi­ron­ment. How­ev­er, the cur­rent price would most like­ly shut down the UK’s steel and met­al indus­try and make car man­u­fac­tur­ers uncom­pet­i­tive. There­fore, it’s impor­tant to man­age that tran­si­tion and to not lump costs on indus­tries before they can afford them. Fur­ther­more, penal­is­ing behav­iours through increased tax­es on con­sump­tion can often impact most those least able to afford it, so it’s impor­tant the process is care­ful­ly planned to ensure fair­ness and avoid an increase in fuel pover­ty.

Next year the UK will host the 2021 United Nations Climate Change Conference, or COP26. What effect could this have on hydrogen policy?

DG: The geopo­lit­i­cal envi­ron­ment on net zero is real­ly com­ing togeth­er; there’s a real oppor­tu­ni­ty to make COP26 all about net zero. The gov­ern­ment can cre­ate an eco­nom­ic back­drop to give the pri­vate sec­tor the con­fi­dence to invest in hydro­gen solu­tions in the same way every­body now accepts elec­tric cars are the only way for­ward. We need to get hydro­gen in the same posi­tion.

What’s the game-changer that’s going to make hydrogen and, in the longer term, net zero happen?

DG: Defin­i­tive deci­sions from gov­ern­ment on what a net-zero UK will look like. This will then dri­ve invest­ment frame­works so the pri­vate sec­tor can invest with con­fi­dence. The scale of the chal­lenge requires the best of the pub­lic sec­tor and pri­vate sec­tor work­ing and col­lab­o­rat­ing togeth­er. Step one is a polit­i­cal state­ment that peo­ple gen­uine­ly believe as the future. The ten-point plan is a good start, but the gov­ern­ment needs to keep going and cre­ate the reg­u­la­to­ry envi­ron­ment to shore up investor con­fi­dence and impor­tant­ly deliv­er at a low cost of cap­i­tal. If the gov­ern­ment gets it right, the UK will be a very attrac­tive des­ti­na­tion for investors. We have the ben­e­fits of a sophis­ti­cat­ed finan­cial sys­tem, skills and exper­tise, and a very well respect­ed, sta­ble legal sys­tem to under­pin invest­ments and infra­struc­ture. And we still have a gov­ern­ment that has cred­it peo­ple will bank on. There­fore, if the gov­ern­ment gets the pol­i­cy envi­ron­ment right, for sure the invest­ment will fol­low.

For more infor­ma­tion please vis­it deloitte.com/uk

Invest­ing in hydro­gen: Ready, set, net zero deloitte.co.uk/investinginhydrogen 

Infrastructure for economic stimulus and achieving net zero by 2050

Gov­ern­ments grap­pling with con­tain­ing and recov­er­ing eco­nom­i­cal­ly from coro­n­avirus must also plot a path to achieve net-zero emis­sions by 2050 to mit­i­gate anoth­er great exis­ten­tial threat, cli­mate change.

Con­front­ed with the coro­n­avirus reces­sion and cli­mate change, many gov­ern­ments have iden­ti­fied an obvi­ous oppor­tu­ni­ty: invest in infra­struc­ture to stim­u­late the econ­o­my and draw down green­house gas emis­sions. Yet a high­ly con­strained pub­lic purse means to do this it is para­mount to spend both strate­gi­cal­ly and wise­ly, as Deloitte out­lines in its new report Infra­struc­ture as an eco­nom­ic stim­u­lus.

The UK government’s own, new­ly announced Ten Point Plan for a Green Indus­tri­al Rev­o­lu­tion is, as it says, a huge oppor­tu­ni­ty to stim­u­late the econ­o­my and cre­ate jobs while decar­bon­is­ing key sec­tors. The plan out­lines infra­struc­ture invest­ments in hydro­gen, elec­tric vehi­cles, pub­lic trans­port, off­shore wind, and car­bon cap­ture and stor­age. These invest­ments will be backed by £100 bil­lion of cap­i­tal expen­di­ture in the first year, a Nation­al Infra­struc­ture Strat­e­gy and a new UK Infra­struc­ture Bank.

How­ev­er, as com­pre­hen­sive as it is, the pro­gramme is only the first phase of what needs to be achieved and rep­re­sents a mere frac­tion of the actu­al invest­ment oppor­tu­ni­ty. Deloitte esti­mate the true lev­el of financ­ing need­ed to deliv­er the UK to net zero is around £1 tril­lion up to 2050.

Owing to the com­plex­i­ty of the chal­lenge, gov­ern­ment mon­ey alone will not suf­fice, pri­vate sec­tor expen­di­ture will also be piv­otal. Yet, while the invest­ment met­rics for off­shore wind and oth­ers are now well estab­lished and thus already attrac­tive to investors, for less-estab­lished tech­nolo­gies it’s much more chal­leng­ing. There­fore, it is essen­tial for the gov­ern­ment to out­line clear mar­ket frame­works and com­pelling busi­ness mod­els for these nascent tech­nolo­gies, such as low-car­bon hydro­gen, and car­bon cap­ture and stor­age.

To over­come the under­stand­able capac­i­ty con­straints with­in the civ­il ser­vice to deliv­er these frame­works, the gov­ern­ment should invest in qual­i­fied and high­ly com­pe­tent resources to expand capa­bil­i­ty, par­tic­u­lar­ly with­in the respec­tive depart­ments, and utilise devolved gov­ern­ments to also dri­ve the agen­da. This will ensure it can cre­ate the right frame­work, with the right invest­ment sig­nals around retrain­ing, skills devel­op­ment, resources and infra­struc­ture, so the pri­vate sec­tor can take up a chunk of the work­load.

Deloitte’s frame­work for infra­struc­ture invest­ment can help every pound the gov­ern­ment spends cre­ate returns of up to 2.7 times the ini­tial out­lay. Along with the new Nation­al Infra­struc­ture Bank, imple­ment­ing these method­olo­gies will give the gov­ern­ment a strong chance of suc­ceed­ing in build­ing back bet­ter, as it says, while cement­ing the path­way to net zero by 2050.


Pro­mot­ed by Deloitte

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