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Opinion – Green hydrogen technologies essential in SADC 

Home National Opinion – Green hydrogen technologies essential in SADC 
Opinion –  Green hydrogen technologies essential in SADC 

Dr Moses Amweelo

 

Southern African Science Service Centre for Climate Change and Adaptive Land Management (Sasscal), which has been turned into Southern Africa’s implementation organisation for the promotion of the Paris Agreement and the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions, is looking with conviction to the day when green hydrogen is in widespread use across Southern African Development Community (SADC) countries and the world as part of the global fight against climate change. 

Green hydrogen is a clean form of hydrogen with a zero-carbon footprint. The SADC Centre for Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency, established in 2015 by the ministers responsible for energy in the 16-country SADC – as a way of addressing energy access and security with the help of the region’s immense renewable energy potential – sees much regional value in green hydrogen development. 

Governments have started to turn their Paris Agreement commitments into more explicit targets and legislated objectives. Included in this is Namibia and its efforts to meet its climate change commitments by prioritising the decarbonisation of polluting industrial sectors. The creation of a green hydrogen economy will displace polluting fuels currently used for power-generation, and it will play a major role in meeting Namibia’s climate change commitments towards a net-zero future.  Furthermore, it promotes innovation and the creation of a green hydrogen economy and an ecosystem around it. Green hydrogen could become the building block for several chemicals such as methanol, ammonia and fertilisers. Scaling-up renewable energy-generation is a prerequisite for cheap and competitive green hydrogen generation. 

Renewable energy farms can be utilised to produce green hydrogen for industry and domestic users to displace diesel usage and create a hydrogen economy. Thereafter, this economy can be expanded to form a green hydrogen ecosystem, and widen Namibia’s reach in other value chains. Once this system is fully scaled-up, it will result in Namibia becoming a net exporter of hydrogen. 

Hatch (a global multidisciplinary management, engineering and development consultancy) can help Namibia achieve its green hydrogen ambitions through the right partnerships. A public-private partnership (PPP) approach is ideal for implementing a green hydrogen strategy in Namibia, as it will allow for the government to work with businesses to service the country’s population. 

Moreover, PPP projects are beneficial to government agencies as they guarantee investments into the public sector and more effective public resources management, ensure risks are optimally balanced between the private and public sector partners, and allow the government to leverage the technical and operational expertise of the private sector partner to achieve higher service delivery standards in due terms. 

Hatch has equally experience with different public-private partner models, and will develop a public-private partnership model plan that assesses the options and lays out the rationale for the preferred PPP model which is most suited for the Namibian government and the green hydrogen strategy. 

The current Green Hydrogen Atlas-Africa initiative which it is helping to advance in the region is also highlighting the value of Southern Africa’s huge platinum group metals (PGMs) endowment, which goes hand-in-hand with the green hydrogen economy, both in the electrolysers that produce green hydrogen and in hydrogen fuel cells which provide mobility, stationary power generation, heating in steel plants and other ferrous and non- ferrous metals plants, and a host of other industrial, commercial and residential applications.  Additionally, SADC hosts a range of metals and minerals used in the hardware that provides the solar power and wind power used to generate the clean electricity which guarantees the decarbonised nature of the hydrogen.  Green hydrogen can be stored, it can function as a carrier, it can be used directly for heating and cooling, it can decarbonise production processes, and will likely be available at the same production cost as fossil or blue hydrogen in the next two to three years. Finally, hydrogen can also be used as a clean fuel for mobility in trucks, trains and cars. In Namibia’s case, hydrogen can displace diesel, which is the main fuel used for power-generation in mining and metals and other heavy industries. 

* Dr Moses Amweelo is a former minister of works, transport and communication. He earned a doctorate in Technical Science, Industrial Engineering and Management from the International Transport Academy (St Petersburg, Russia).