The geopolitics of hydrogen : technologies, actors and scenarios until 2040

Zusammenfassung: The transition to a hydrogen-based economy is gaining momentum in both Germany and the European Union (EU). Used as an energy carrier, hydrogen holds the promise of freeing hard-to-decarbonise sectors like heavy industry, aviation, and maritime trade from their emissions. At the same time, policymakers hope that hydrogen will promote Europe’s energy independence, push sustainable development, and strengthen value-based trade. This study presents three plausible yet disruptive scenarios for the geo­politics of hydrogen up to the year 2040 (developed with a team of experts in a multi-stage foresight process). "Hydrogen Realignment" considers the possibility of an eastward shift of industry, power, and technological lead­er­ship; "Hydrogen (In)Dependence" depicts a future, in which Europe pur­sues hydrogen self-sufficiency but becomes dependent on raw material supply; and "Hydrogen Imperialism" delves into the dystopian scenario of a hydrogen transition dominated by hegemons and despots. The transition to hydrogen is likely to shift and complicate Europe’s exter­nal dependence rather than eliminate it; the role of supply chains will become more important. Moreover, the potential of hydrogen trade for global sustainable development is limited and requires targeted efforts. Resource distribution, production potential, current geopolitical power dynamics, and their interplay will influence hydrogen policy and deci­sion-making along the entire value chain, with actors often giving priority to socioeconomic, geopolitical, and technopolitical considerations. Germany and the EU must pursue a proactive hydrogen strategy, acknowledge the preferences of external actors, and form pragmatic partnerships to keep sight of climate goals, retain industry, and avoid losing global influence. In addition to promoting targeted technologies, decision-makers must manage dependencies across sectors and do so in an anticipatory way. Pursuing diversification is indispensable, and instituting targeted diplomacy and development assistance would be helpful. The new hydrogen sector also needs governing institutions - for example a "Hydrogen Alliance" - to mitigate geopolitical risks and allocate investments correctly

Weitere Titel
Die Geopolitik des Wasserstoffs
Standort
Deutsche Nationalbibliothek Frankfurt am Main
Umfang
1 Online-Ressource (45 Seiten)
Ausgabe
This corrected version is dated 20 November 2023
Sprache
Englisch
Anmerkungen
Illustrationen
Gesehen am 21.11.2023
"English version of SWP-Studie 14/2023"

Erschienen in
SWP research paper / Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik ; 2023, 13 (November 2023)
SWP research paper ; 2023, 13 (November 2023)

Klassifikation
Politik
Wirtschaft
Schlagwort
Europäische Union
Wasserstoffenergietechnik
Wasserstoff
Prognose
Szenario
Deutschland

Ereignis
Veröffentlichung
(wo)
Berlin
(wer)
SWP
(wann)
20 November 2023
Urheber
Beteiligte Personen und Organisationen

DOI
10.18449/2023RP13v02
Handle
10419/280726
URN
urn:nbn:de:101:1-2407251039262.795989883285
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Letzte Aktualisierung
2025-08-14T10:52:26+0200

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  • 20 November 2023

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