• DocumentCode
    839913
  • Title

    Does a Hydrogen Economy Make Sense?

  • Author

    Bossel, Ulf

  • Author_Institution
    Eur. Fuel Cell Forum, Oberrohrdorf
  • Volume
    94
  • Issue
    10
  • fYear
    2006
  • Firstpage
    1826
  • Lastpage
    1837
  • Abstract
    The establishment of a sustainable energy future is one of the most pressing tasks of mankind. With the exhaustion of fossil resources the energy economy will change from a chemical to an electrical base. This transition is one of physics, not one of politics. It must be based on proven technology and existing engineering experience. The transition process will take many years and should start soon. Unfortunately, politics seems to listen to the advice of visionaries and lobby groups. Many of their qualitative arguments are not based on facts and physics. A secure sustainable energy future cannot be based on hype and activism, but has to be built on solid grounds of established science and engineering. In this paper the energy needs of a hydrogen economy are quantified. Only 20%-25% of the source energy needed to synthesized hydrogen from natural compounds can be recovered for end use by efficient fuel cells. Because of the high energy losses within a hydrogen economy the synthetic energy carrier cannot compete with electricity. As the fundamental laws of physics cannot be chanced by research, politics or investments, a hydrogen economy will never make sense
  • Keywords
    fuel cells; hydrogen economy; sustainable development; electrolysis; electron economy; energy efficiency; fuel cells; high energy losses; hydrogen compression; hydrogen economy; hydrogen liquefaction; hydrogen pipelines; hydrogen storage; hydrogen transfer; hydrogen transport; metal hydrides; onsite hydrogen generation; source energy; sustainable energy; synthetic energy carrier; Chemicals; Electrochemical processes; Energy conversion; Energy efficiency; Fuel cells; Heat transfer; Hydrogen; Physics; Power engineering and energy; Pressing; Electrolysis; electron economy; energy; energy efficiency; heat of formation; heating values; hydrogen; hydrogen compression; hydrogen economy; hydrogen liquefaction; hydrogen pipelines; hydrogen storage; hydrogen transfer; hydrogen transport; metal hydrides; onsite hydrogen generation; reforming;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Proceedings of the IEEE
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9219
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/JPROC.2006.883715
  • Filename
    4016414