Abstract

Water electrolysis is a process which converts electricity into hydrogen and is seen as a key technology in enabling a net-zero compatible energy system. It will enable the scale-up of renewable electricity as a primary energy source for heating, transport, and industry. However, displacing the role currently met by fossil fuels might require a price of hydrogen as low as 1 $/kg, whereas renewable hydrogen produced using electrolysis is currently 10 $/kg. This article explores how mass manufacturing of proton exchange membrane (PEM) electrolysers can reduce the capital cost and, thus, make the production of renewable power to hydrogen gas (PtG) more economically viable. A bottom up direct manufacturing model was developed to determine how economies of scale can reduce the capital cost of electrolysis. The results demonstrated that (assuming an annual production rate of 5000 units of 200 kW PEM electrolysis systems) the capital cost of a PEM electrolysis system can reduce from 1990 $/kW to 590 $/kW based on current technology and then on to 431 $/kW and 300 $/kW based on the an installed capacity scale-up of ten- and one-hundred-fold, respectively. A life-cycle costing analysis was then completed to determine the importance of the capital cost of an electrolysis system to the price of hydrogen. It was observed that, based on current technology, mass manufacturing has a large impact on the price of hydrogen, reducing it from 6.40 $/kg (at 10 units units per year) to 4.16 $/kg (at 5000 units per year). Further analysis was undertaken to determine the cost at different installed capacities and found that the cost could reduce further to 2.63 $/kg and 1.37 $/kg, based on technology scale-up by ten- and one hundred-fold, respectively. Based on the 2030 (and beyond) baseline assumptions, it is expected that hydrogen production from PEM electrolysis could be used as an industrial process feed stock, provide power and heat to buildings and as a fuel for heavy good vehicles (HGVs). In the cases of retrofitted gas networks for residential or industrial heating solutions, or for long distance transport, it represents a more economically attractive and mass-scale compatible solution when compared to electrified heating or transport solutions.

Highlights

  • The results show that the total capital cost of a proton exchange membrane (PEM) electrolysis system can be reduced by 70% as a result of mass manufacturing

  • By increasing production from 10 units to 5000 units a year, the capital cost of manufacturing a PEM electrolysis system will be reduced from 1990 $/kW to 590 $/kg

  • These substantial savings can be achieved as a result of the large capital cost of the plant and labour cost being spread across a greater number of units

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Summary

Introduction

One of the solutions is to increase the production of renewable energy sources (RES) and displacing the use of fossil fuels. The observed trend is that, as more renewable technologies are deployed, the installed capacity has increased and, in almost all cases, there has been a corresponding reduction in the installed cost of the technology. Cost reduction made on the basis of a simple power law extrapolation through historical data and estimates of market sizes [2,3,4,5,6]

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