A
strong European technology partnership to move towards the hydrogen
economy,
European
Commission President, Romano Prodi, today launched the
"European Hydrogen and Fuel Cell Technology" Platform, whose Advisory Council includes key players of the European
hydrogen sector, at its first assembly in
"At
the current pace,
The
creation of the European Hydrogen and Fuel Cell Technology Platform is sponsored
by President Prodi, along with Vice-President and
Energy and Transport Commissioner Loyola de Palacio
and Research Commissioner Philippe Busquin.
A
Technology Platform: what for?
The
EU effort in developing and consolidating this
technology is fragmented and spread across a number of member states, often with
overlapping activities. This is why last year the Commission decided to set up a
high level group. The group's vision report was strongly endorsed at the major
European conference, "The hydrogen economy a bridge to sustainable energy".
Foremost
amongst the group's recommendations was the establishment of a "European
Hydrogen and Fuel Cell Technology Partnership", guided by an Advisory
Council.
The
expected outcome of this Technology Platform will be the development of a broad
and far-reaching hydrogen and fuel cell strategy at the EU level. The intention is to secure the EU's position as a leading world-wide player in the supply
and deployment of hydrogen technologies. The Technology Platform Advisory
Council comprises 35 members representing the relevant stakeholders, and
distinguished by their leadership in the field (See the list in Annex 1).
The
first assembly of this Technology Platform, to be held on January 20-21 in
Brussels and opened by Commission President Romano Prodi, will address the three cornerstones for implementing
the new Hydrogen Economy in Europe: "Transport applications" (by 2020, 5% of
road transport fuels could be based on hydrogen, as proposed by the EU Communication on alternative fuels for road
transportation); "Stationary applications" and "Hydrogen infrastructure". It
will stimulate the formation of working groups which will support the Platform's
operations and objectives.
The
Technology Platform will have the opportunity to build consensus and drive
forward a coherent European research and deployment strategy in the hydrogen and
fuel cell sector, including public-private partnerships, lighthouse projects,
standards and regulations. In so doing, it will build critical mass and rally
stakeholders to make
Hydrogen:
a clean energy vector
Hydrogen,
like electricity, is a clean energy vector. It can be produced from a wide
variety of primary energy sources. It is possible to de-carbonise fossil fuels
by carbon capture, allowing for the production of hydrogen from these
traditional fuels with negligible carbon emissions. But, more importantly,
hydrogen produced through a range of renewable primary energy sources such as
wind, biomass and solar energy is ideal for gradually replacing fossil energy -
in particular, oil.
A
concrete application: fuel cells
The
energy conversion principle in a fuel cell is clean and silent: hydrogen
combines with oxygen from the air in the fuel cell to produce water and
electricity. The electrochemical conversion processes are not limited by the
same physical laws of thermodynamics that govern combustion processes and are,
therefore, more efficient. Fuel cells generally use hydrogen as a fuel but
others, such as natural gas and methanol, can also be used. In the long term,
fuel cells have the potential to replace a very large proportion of current
energy systems in all fields, from mobile phone batteries to vehicle propulsion
to centralised or decentralised stationary power generation. They also represent
a potential paradigm shift in the way we produce and consume energy.
The
European Union has been supporting fuel cell research since 1989, and the
growing importance of this field is reflected in the substantial increase in the
financial support to fuel cell research, from €8 million in the 1988-1992 programme, to €150 million for 1999-2002. At present, after a
first call of proposals for the 6th Research Framework Programme (FP6
2002-2006), the EU contribution to these activities
amounts to €95 million; two more calls for proposals are expected before 2006.
Around €300 million should be allocated to hydrogen and fuel cell research
within FP6.
The
European Initiative for Growth and QuickStart
Programme
In
November 2003 the Commission also launched the European Initiative for Growth to
accelerate EU economic recovery. The Growth Initiative
includes a "Quick Start Programme" of projects of public and private investment
in infrastructure, networks and knowledge. The aim is to encourage the creation
of public-private partnerships, in co-operation with the European Investment
Bank, to leverage finance.
This
programme foresees a major ten year initiative for hydrogen-related research,
production and use, with an indicative total budget of €2.8 billion of public
and private funding. The technology platform can help shape this initiative,
which has already received the political backing of Member States at the highest
level.
The
international framework
In
June 2003, hydrogen was discussed during the EU-US
summit. In a joint statement with the
The
growing commitment to developing a global hydrogen economy was further
strengthened in November 2003, when the International Partnership for the
Hydrogen Economy was launched with the
Links
of interest:
The
proceedings of the meeting 20-21 January 2004 in
http://forum.europa.eu.int/Public/irc/rtd/eurhydrofuelcellplat/library
The
concept of a Hydrogen and Fuel Cell Technology Platform, and its related
activities, was endorsed by the European Commission on September 2003 in the
Communication "A European Partnership for the Sustainable Hydrogen
Economy"
The
objectives, scope, operational structure and timelines of the Technology
Platform, is set out in the document posted at:
http://europa.eu.int/comm/research/energy/nn/nn_rt_htp1_en.html
The
European Initiative for Growth and the "QuickStart"
programme:
http://europa.eu.int/comm/commissioners/prodi/pdf/growth_initiative_en.pdf