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Reliable and Economically Viable Green Hydrogen Infrastructures—Challenges and Applications

信頼性が高く経済的に実現可能なグリーン水素インフラ—課題と応用 (AI 翻訳)

P. Komarnicki

Hydrogen📚 査読済 / ジャーナル2026-02-02#水素Origin: EU
DOI: 10.3390/hydrogen7010022
原典: https://doi.org/10.3390/hydrogen7010022

🤖 gxceed AI 要約

日本語

本論文は、グリーン水素システムの技術的・経済的側面を同時に扱う統合モデルフレームワークを提案する。ドイツの事例を基に、既存ガスインフラの活用や追加の発電容量の必要性を議論し、水素経済への移行における課題と応用を包括的に検討する。

English

This paper proposes a unified modeling framework for green hydrogen infrastructures that integrates technical and economic aspects. Using the German energy system as a case, it discusses the transition to a hydrogen economy, including infrastructure requirements such as electrolyzers, pipelines, and H2 turbines, and quantifies the need for 20-30 GW additional capacity.

Unofficial AI-generated summary based on the public title and abstract. Not an official translation.

📝 gxceed 編集解説 — Why this matters

日本のGX文脈において

日本でも水素社会の実現に向けた取り組みが進んでおり、本論文の統合モデルは日本の水素インフラ計画にも応用可能である。特に、既存ガスインフラの転用や経済性評価のフレームワークは、日本の政策立案や企業の投資判断に示唆を与える。

In the global GX context

Globally, hydrogen is emerging as a critical flexibility option for integrating renewables. This paper's integrated techno-economic model can help evaluate hydrogen projects and infrastructure investment, aligning with ISSB and transition finance frameworks that require robust cost and operational data.

👥 読者別の含意

🔬研究者:Provides a comprehensive modeling framework for green hydrogen systems that can be used for further research on infrastructure planning.

🏢実務担当者:Offers insights into economic viability and technical requirements for hydrogen projects, useful for feasibility studies and business case development.

🏛政策担当者:Highlights infrastructure needs and cost factors for hydrogen transition, informing policy on hydrogen strategy and investment incentives.

📄 Abstract(原文)

The smart grid concept is based on the full integration of different types of energy sources and intelligent devices. Due to the short- and long-term volatility of these sources, new flexibility measures are necessary to ensure the smart grid operates stably and reliably. One option is to convert renewable energy into hydrogen, especially during periods of generation overcapacity, in order that the hydrogen that is produced can be stored effectively and used “just in time” to stabilize the power system by undergoing a reverse conversion process in gas turbines or fuel cells which then supply power to the network. On the other hand, in order to achieve a sustainable general energy system (GES), it is necessary to replace other forms of fossil energy use, such as that used for heating and other industrial processes. Research indicates that a comprehensive hydrogen supply infrastructure is required. This infrastructure would include electrolyzers, conversion stations, pipelines, storage facilities, and hydrogen gas turbines and/or fuel cell power stations. Some studies in Germany suggest that the existing gas infrastructure could be used for this purpose. Further, nuclear and coal power plants are not considered reserve power plants (as in the German case), and an additional 20–30 GW of generation capacity in H2-operated gas turbines and strong H2 transportation infrastructure will be required over the next 10 years. The novelty of the approach presented in this article lies in the development of a unified modeling framework that enables the simultaneous and coherent representation of both economic and technical aspects of hydrogen production systems which will be used for planning and pre-decision making. From the technical perspective, the model, based on the black box approach, captures the key operational characteristics of hydrogen production, including energy consumption, system efficiency, and operational constraints. In parallel, the economic layer incorporates capital expenditures (CAPEX), operational expenditures (OPEX), and cost-related performance indicators, allowing for a direct linkage between technical operation and economic outcomes. This paper describes the systematic transformation from today’s power system to one that includes a hydrogen economy, with a particular focus on practical experiences and developments, especially in the German energy system. It discusses the components of this new system in depth, focusing on current challenges and applications. Some scaled current applications demonstrate the state of the art in this area, including not only technical requirements (reliability, risks) and possibilities, but also economic aspects (cost, business models, impact factors).

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