
1 minute read
Session VI
INFRASTRUCTURE AND OTHER RESOURCES:
Mr. Paddy Padmanathan
Advertisement
Tomorrow’s fuel: Case Studies from various Regions
No cheaper way to generate energy from wind and solar than with hydrogen and no market pricing is attached to it
Coal- 70-75% is related to market fluctuations but with Green Hydrogen, we can potentially lock the price
USD 3 - 3.5 cents/kWh solar and wind can be produced.
First at-scale plant being produced and can do it at USD 8 cents and can get to USD 2 cents by 2030 Green hydrogen needs to come in fast to be competitive and meet the high demand
Marco Alveras


ACWA Power - have led the reduction of solar power tariffs by 80% and are convinced hydrogen will come down similarly
"savetheplanetandimprovethejobprospects"
The Netherlands is the largest producer of Hydrogen globally, while the biggest Oil and gas companies are in Africa. Correspondingly, a large hydrogen-receiving facility is being built in Germany.
Solution is to deliver synthetic methane. Build regional data systems and collaborate for iron and steel production
Need to start from within schools to educate the young.