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Moving & Storing Hydrogen


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This time-effective course is intended for those seeking a wide-ranging, hype-free and independent perspective on the technologies and market factors which will influence the scale up of hydrogen trading and supply chains.

The course provides a clearly explained, business-focused perspective on the different ways that hydrogen can be stored and transported from its source of production to its end-use application (or stored for use as a fuel). The covered options include hydrogen itself, along with the key hydrogen-based derivatives and carriers that offer potentially more economic and practical alternatives.

Attendees will be able to separate what is actually happening in the market from the headlines and hype, and to identify the pros and cons of different supply chain options and pathways at different scales of deployment. The course will evaluate these pros and cons from perspectives including energy efficiency, economics and practicality.


Course Benefits:

  • Learn about the practical challenges of hydrogen as an energy carrier or chemical commodity

  • Examine the pros and cons of compressed vs. liquified hydrogen

  • Understand the challenges of transporting hydrogen by pipeline (new and repurposed)

  • Discuss the considerations for blending hydrogen with natural gas

  • Assess the options for storing hydrogen at large-scale, including salt cavern storage

  • Examine liquid hydrogen carriers and derivatives (including ammonia, methanol, synthetic fuels & LOHCs)

  • Understand the case for transporting and using derivatives rather than hydrogen itself

  • Discuss the results of studies comparing long-distance hydrogen transport options

  • Learn the latest insight from market trends and example projects

  • See how policy is influencing the development of hydrogen supply chains


This Course Includes:

  • Access to all three sessions each lasting approximately three hours

  • All session recordings & any course materials covered during the course

  • Interactive format with dedicated Q&A sections with the trainer

  • Flexible access on any device

  • A certificate of attendance after full completion of the course


Agenda

Attend live or watch the recordings. Each session includes dedicated Q&A sections throughout.

Session 1: 13th March, 14:00 - 17:00 CET

Hydrogen as a gas

Storing and moving hydrogen gas

  • The properties of hydrogen as an energy carrier

  • Hydrogen safety factors

  • Hydrogen compression: current products and engineering challenges

  • What pressure hydrogen? (Application and energy efficiency considerations)

  • Storing compressed hydrogen at a variety of scales, from mobility applications to salt caverns

 

Hydrogen in pipelines

  • Barriers to hydrogen within pipeline networks, including embrittlement

  • Safety, including evolving standards and gas regulations, and consumer perceptions

  • Hydrogen/natural gas blending considerations, limits and the connected user base

  • De-blending hydrogen from natural gas

  • 100% hydrogen infrastructure and backbone networks


Session 2: 14th March, 14:00 - 17:00 CET

Liquid hydrogen & ammonia

Liquified hydrogen

  • ‘LH2’: liquid hydrogen production, including energy requirements

  • Challenges in transporting and storing liquid hydrogen

  • What are the potential market sectors and applications for liquified hydrogen?

  • Cost, efficiency, and infrastructure considerations

  • Supply chain, technology and engineering opportunities

 

Ammonia as a hydrogen carrier (or end-use fuel)

  • The pros and cons of ammonia as a hydrogen carrier (compared to hydrogen itself)

  • The processes of ammonia production (current and emerging)

  • Options for storing and moving ammonia

  • Dehydrogenation (ammonia cracking) and its technoeconomic challenges

  • Applications and proposals of direct ammonia utilisation, including in shipping and power


Session 3: 15th May, 14:00 - 17:00 CET

Hydrocarbon hydrogen derivatives and carriers

Other hydrogen derivatives: methanol and ‘e-fuels’

  • The processes for linking clean hydrogen with carbon capture & utilisation (CCU)

    Methanol production and applications

  • Synthetic natural gas (methanation)

  • Synthetic fuels for transport applications

  • Why store and move synthetic hydrocarbons rather than hydrogen itself?

 

Other hydrogen carriers: LOHCs

  • Reviewing the status of liquid organic hydrogen carrier (LOHCs) technology

  • Evaluating the pros and cons of LOHCs (compared to pure hydrogen, ammonia, or e-fuels)

  • Strategies for overcoming efficiency and energy loss barriers

  • Reviewing the outputs of published models and scenarios incorporating future hydrogen trading options  

  • How importance is the re-use of existing infrastructure likely to be?

 


Meet the Trainer

Dr John Massey is Managing Director of Grey Cells Energy Ltd., where he conducts independent market assessment and opportunity/risk analysis for clean energy technologies. He delivers market briefings, oneto- one coaching and training courses worldwide, both online and in-person, along with strategy and business plan consulting to help companies (particularly SMEs) position themselves to best grasp new low-carbon market opportunities.

In addition to delivering training globally under his “Grey Cells Energy” brand, John is a co-founder of Astute New Energy, helping firms to navigate the changing power sector through business, strategy and stakeholder communication advisory work.


What Attendees Are Saying

It was a good overview on the basic concepts of hydrogen and also the latest technology available.
— Senior Manager Transmission, Invenergy
The trainer was very knowledgeable in the area of services that are required by a renewable network.
— Partner, Ianus
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Natural (White) Hydrogen

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18 March

Hydrogen Geopolitics & Geoeconomics: Europe-Asia-Oceania