Close Menu
Energy NewsEnergy News
  • NEWS
    • Breaking News
    • Hydrogen
    • Energy Storage
    • Grid
    • SMR
    • Projects
    • Production
    • Transport
    • Research
  • SPOTLIGHT
    • Interviews
    • Face 2 Face
    • Podcast
    • Webinars
    • Analysis
    • Columnists
    • Reviews
    • Events
  • REGIONAL
    • Africa
    • Americas
    • Asia
    • Europe
    • Middle east
    • Pacific
  • COMMUNITY
  • ABOUT
    • Advisory Board
    • Contact us
    • Report Your News
    • Advertize
    • Subscribe
LinkedIn X (Twitter) YouTube Facebook
Trending
  • EU–China Energy Diplomacy Amid German Hydrogen Retrenchment: A Deep Dive
  • Merredin BESS Secures $220M Financing but Pays Premium over Global Battery Cost Benchmarks
  • Brazil Stakes Claim in Global Hydrogen Race with €1.3B Investment in Uberaba and Açu Projects
  • Bremen Project Collapse Reveals Fragile Economics Behind Germany’s Green Hydrogen Hopes
  • The Hydrogen Heating Mirage: Why Germany’s “H₂-Ready” Promise Risks Locking in High Costs and Low Returns
  • How Lyten’s Salvage Mission Could Upend Europe’s Battery Wars
  • Doug Wicks on Why Energy Innovation Is Broken—and How to Fix It
  • Cost and Policy Roadblocks Stall LEAG’s H2UB Boxberg Green Hydrogen Hub
LinkedIn X (Twitter) YouTube Facebook
Energy NewsEnergy News
  • NEWS
    • Breaking News
    • Hydrogen
    • Energy Storage
    • Grid
    • SMR
    • Projects
    • Production
    • Transport
    • Research
  • SPOTLIGHT
    • Interviews
    • Face 2 Face
    • Podcast
    • Webinars
    • Analysis
    • Columnists
    • Reviews
    • Events
  • REGIONAL
    • Africa
    • Americas
    • Asia
    • Europe
    • Middle east
    • Pacific
  • COMMUNITY
  • ABOUT
    • Advisory Board
    • Contact us
    • Report Your News
    • Advertize
    • Subscribe
Energy NewsEnergy News
Home Home - Hydrogen
Green Hydrogen H2 News

Industrial policy and certification are required for green hydrogen

Arnes BiogradlijaBy Arnes Biogradlija15/03/20224 Mins Read
Share
LinkedIn Twitter Facebook Email WhatsApp Telegram
Green hydrogen is projected to be in high demand as governments race to meet their net zero carbon targets due to its capacity to decarbonize difficult-to-abate sectors such as chemicals and steelmaking.

However, the current green hydrogen market is in its infancy, and additional work, particularly on the part of policymakers, is needed to maximize green hydrogen’s impact on decarbonizing the industrial sector and end-use sectors in general.

To accelerate the adoption of green hydrogen in industry and establish a credible market, the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) and the IRENA Coalition for Action each released a new publication, Green hydrogen for industry: A guide to policymaking and Green Hydrogen Certification Brief, respectively.

“These new reports are particularly opportune because green hydrogen needs rapid policy action to ensure and maximise its contribution to the energy transition. As we know, IRENA’s World Energy Transitions Outlook’s 1.5°C Scenario projects that hydrogen will provide around 10 per cent of the necessary greenhouse gases reduction by 2050,” said Rabia Ferroukhi, IRENA Director-Knowledge, Policy and Finance Centre, in her opening remarks of the Policy Talks that presented the reports on 8 March 2022. 

“And why are we focusing on industry?” asked IRENA’s expert Emanuele Bianco, while presenting the new guide to policy making report. “Because the reality today is that the industrial sector is already a major consumer of hydrogen, but we need to shift from fossil fuels-based to renewables-based hydrogen.  This calls for urgent industrial policy support, and high priority for green hydrogen policy should be placed on the industrial sector.”

Similarly, the European Union (EU) views green hydrogen as a critical component of a transition away from imported natural gas. Ruud Kempener, Policy Officer for the European Commission, stated that the Commission’s aim for green hydrogen use in industry is 50% by 2030. The EU’s present objective is 5.6 million tonnes of green hydrogen by 2030, but it appears to be capable of exceeding that figure by producing 10 million tonnes locally and importing an additional 10 million tonnes.

Such a target in the EU alone could result in huge demand centers that help jumpstart green hydrogen economies of scale. However, cost, technical constraints, a lack of a market for green materials and goods, a lack of sufficiently ambitious policies, and the risk of carbon leakage continue to impede the use of green hydrogen in industry.

According to IRENA’s recent analysis, green hydrogen industrial policies should begin with the adoption of decarbonisation plans and sector-specific planning. Prioritization, carbon pricing, and support programs are more critical than market development methods for green products.

However, stimulating the market demands prudent implementation as well. This is why members of IRENA’s Coalition for Action have emphasized the critical nature of tracking systems for the green hydrogen sector’s development.

The lead authors of the Green Hydrogen Certification Brief and members of the Coalition’s Decarbonizing End-Use Sectors Working Group, EKOenergy, Siemens Gamesa Renewable Energy, ACCIONA Energa, and IRENA, emphasized during the Policy Talks that the establishment of a national, regional, and international market for green hydrogen is contingent upon the acceptance of tracking instruments certifying its origin.

The Coalition analyzes a set of technical concerns for developing certification systems and outlines the numerous benefits of such schemes in this new brief. Additionally, the brief makes nine essential recommendations to assist policymakers in developing certification systems and establishing a market for green hydrogen to speed the energy transition.

The Policy Talks determined that industrial use of green hydrogen will continue to expand, with demand centers appearing across the globe. Both the public and private sectors must seize this opportunity to carbon-neutralize industry and establish inclusive, sustainable economies.

Share. LinkedIn Twitter Facebook Email

Related Posts

Hydrogen

EU–China Energy Diplomacy Amid German Hydrogen Retrenchment: A Deep Dive

02/07/2025
hydrogen

Brazil Stakes Claim in Global Hydrogen Race with €1.3B Investment in Uberaba and Açu Projects

02/07/2025
Hydrogen

Bremen Project Collapse Reveals Fragile Economics Behind Germany’s Green Hydrogen Hopes

02/07/2025
Hydrogen

The Hydrogen Heating Mirage: Why Germany’s “H₂-Ready” Promise Risks Locking in High Costs and Low Returns

02/07/2025
Hydrogen

Cost and Policy Roadblocks Stall LEAG’s H2UB Boxberg Green Hydrogen Hub

01/07/2025
hydrogen

Cost Pressures Topple Queensland’s $12.5 Billion CQ‑H2 Green Hydrogen Project

01/07/2025
Hydrogen

EU–China Energy Diplomacy Amid German Hydrogen Retrenchment: A Deep Dive

02/07/2025
BESS

Merredin BESS Secures $220M Financing but Pays Premium over Global Battery Cost Benchmarks

02/07/2025
hydrogen

Brazil Stakes Claim in Global Hydrogen Race with €1.3B Investment in Uberaba and Açu Projects

02/07/2025
Hydrogen

Bremen Project Collapse Reveals Fragile Economics Behind Germany’s Green Hydrogen Hopes

02/07/2025

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news from the hydrogen market subscribe to our newsletter.

LinkedIn X (Twitter) Facebook YouTube

News

  • Inteviews
  • Webinars
  • Hydrogen
  • Spotlight
  • Regional

Company

  • Advertising
  • Media Kits
  • Contact Info
  • GDPR Policy

Subscriptions

  • Subscribe
  • Newsletters
  • Sponsored News

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news from EnergyNewsBiz about hydrogen.

© 2025 EnergyNews.biz
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Accessibility

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.