This audio is brought to you by Endress and Hauser, a global leader in process and laboratory measurement technology, offering a broad portfolio of instruments, solutions and services for industrial process measurement and automation.
South Africa spelled out a detailed green hydrogen pursuit at the United Nations Industry Development Organisation (UNIDO) conference attended by 70 countries in Vienna on Wednesday, April 8, where South Africa's Industrial Development Corporation green hydrogen just energy transition investment plan programme director Rebecca Maserumule outlined the steps South Africa is taking to initiate first-mover green hydrogen project development.
From a critical meetals perspective, South Africa is the host of the overwhelmingly largest global volumes of platinum group metals, which can serve as catalysts in electrolysers that separate water into hydrogen and oxygen and then play a second catalytic role by converting the hydrogen back into electricity that provides emission-free mobility for buses, trucks trains, cars, ships and planes as well as stationary electricity. (Also watch attached Creamer Media video.)
Hydrogen anchors the global future energy mix, was Maserumule final statement after reporting that the initiatives that are under way to assist first movers include a 120-question final investment decision as swell as the partnering of first movers to international conferences.
"Next month, we'll be in Rotterdam, and the delegation will led by our Minister of Electricity and Energy," Maserumule reported.
The panel discussion, covered by Mining Weekly, was moderated by UK global green industries head Paul Durrant and participating were Germany international green hydrogen ramp-up head Gunther Grathwohl, Netherlands international and European hydrogen senior policy coordinator Rodrigo Scholtbach, Italy hydrogen and its derivatives senior export Roberto Cianella, and Brazil renewable energy division head Lais de Souza Garcia, who expressed strong optimism about the future of hydrogen in the South American country.
"We're living in uncertain times now, so it's not quite clear how much hydrogen we'll need, but what is clear is that we'll need hydrogen," Grathwohl emphasised, adding that it is also clear that Germany is unable to produce the hydrogen it needs domestically, a situation which is quite the opposite in Southern Africa.
"We have amazing renewable resources in wind and solar to producing the hydrogen molecules and be a partner to the rest of the world," Namibia Green Hydrogen Programme policy planning head Joseph Mukendwa pointed out during the opening panel discussion.
This was outlined shortly after the conference heard that two thirds of the volumes of hydrogen needed in Austria will have to be imported, about which Netherlands international and Scholtbach said ditto in the case of the Netherlands, and Germany.
"We have in Europe one of the main demand centres worldwide and if you look a bit further, Japan, South Korea will also be depending on imported volumes," added Scholtbach, which presents major supply opportunity for the global south.
"We're open to importing hydrogen," said Italy's energy markets DG Alessandro Noce, while adding that hydrogen is not only a decarbconiser but a driver of inclusive growth, to which
Durrant, who moderated the discussion, responded that he loved the fact hydrogen brings economic development and growth with its cleanness.
"Africa clearly has vast potential for clean hydrogen production but many of the projects that we've seen mooted in Africa have yet to reach final investment decision. There is clearly a risk that if producing countries and their institutions are consistently required to underwrite the earliest and riskiest stage of development, without the strength of those offtake agreements and other things in place, those countries are essentially de risking projects for others at their own cost.
"From a South African perspective, what would genu...