Green Energy

Canada overestimating hydrogen’s potential to cut carbon emissions, report says

Canada has overestimated how much using hydrogen could reduce greenhouse gas emissions over the next decade, potentially jeopardizing Ottawa’s ability to meet climate targets, a report from the Auditor General’s office said on Tuesday.

Hydrogen is a low carbon fuel that policymakers hope will replace fossil fuels used in industry and heavy-duty vehicles.

Canada’s Natural Resources ministry released a federal hydrogen strategy in December 2020 but used “unrealistic assumptions” to calculate that the clean fuel could cut 45 megatonnes of emissions by 2030, Jerry DeMarco, Commissioner of the Environment and Sustainable Development, said in his report.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s Liberal government has promised to cut climate-warming emissions at least 40 per cent below 2005 levels by 2030, which would amount to a 293-megatonne decline.

The Canadian government has called hydrogen a critical part of the solution to combating climate change and wants the country to become a large-scale exporter of the clean fuel.

DeMarco said Canada’s hydrogen strategy assumed a low price for electricity, the adoption of aggressive and sometimes nonexistent policies, and an ambitious uptake of new technology.

“In our view, the assumptions in the federal hydrogen strategy are overly optimistic and compromise the credibility of the expected emission reductions,” DeMarco said in a statement.

In contrast with the Natural Resources ministry, Canada’s environment ministry estimated hydrogen technology would cut 15 megatonnes of emissions by 2030.

The audit said the federal government should standardize its approach to projecting emissions reductions, and improve the quality and transparency of its climate modelling.

The auditor general’s office also released reports on other environmental policies on Tuesday.

Those reports included the findings that government support for workers impacted by the phase-out of coal power was inadequate, and that some groups within Canadian society were being disproportionately impacted by a federal price on carbon.

In a joint statement Canada’s environment and natural resources ministries said the government would adopt a number of the Commissioner’s recommendations, including standardizing calculations on how measures like adopting hydrogen reduce emissions, and ensuring the carbon price is fair and effective.

I am Renew

Recent Posts

IIT (ISM) Dhanbad sentra.world come together to decarbonise Indian Steel with biochar

The Indian Institute of Technology (Indian School of Mines), Dhanbad, has signed an MoU with…

2 days ago

Kotyark Industries secures Rs 564 crore biodiesel order to OMCs

Kotyark Industries Limited has announced that it has been awarded a tender to supply 48,381…

2 days ago

Hydrogen Europe, GH2 India agree at EUH2Week to collaborate for clean hydrogen

In a key development, Hydrogen Europe and the Green Hydrogen Association (GH2 India) have signed…

2 days ago

EDF Group, Abraxas Power join forces for Newfoundland’s Green Hydrogen, Ammonia Project

Energy transition players Abraxas Power Corp and EDF Group have collaborated to jointly develop the…

2 days ago

NTPC exhibits fly ash-based eco-housing solution ‘Sukh’ at IITF, Pragati Maidan

The state owned NTPC has launched an eco-friendly and affordable housing solution called ‘Sukh’ Eco-house,…

2 days ago

Tecnimont to set up waste-to-biogas plant in Odisha’s Paradip

Tecnimont has announced that its Indian subsidiary, Tecnimont Private Limited (TCMPL), has partnered with Paradeep…

2 days ago