For a bunch of technology-types, there's some pretty, err, fascinating reading here!
I'll try to put the climate-science debate aside. But to say- in what other area of science, when 98% of the science experts in the field say something is happening, do we say (with imagined authority!) "Oh they must be wrong". Have a look at the climate skeptics regularly referenced in the Murdoch Press. Its the same 2-3 people all the time. And none of them are climate scientists- mostly they're geologists.
This little YouTube video explains the issue well.
Climate change is real, and we have to do something about it. That's hard.
And fossil fuels are very energy dense. Which is hard to replace.
There's nothing new about hydrogen. We're in at least the third hydrogen hype cycle I've seen. Have a read of the book "They Hype About Hydrogen", written in 2004. There's even been hydrogen aircraft- see the TU155 for example.
Today, governments around the world (including Australia) are funding lots of work targeting "green" hydrogen at $2/kg. They hope we'll get there by 2030. Changing units around, that works out at ~$16/GJ. The last 12 months, natural gas has been around $5-$8/GJ. Hmm. Tough market for hydrogen at $2/kg!
And the $2 price doesn't include storage or transport costs associated with hydrogen. It is far less energy dense than natural gas- so you need around 3-4x the storage. And it makes a lot of pipe materials brittle. Not to mention it burns colourlessly, is hideously explosive, etc, so HSE costs are far greater.
All in all, for hydrogen to compete against natural gas, something will need to change the economics dramatically, even at our hoped-for goal of $2. That something is either legislation, or a carbon price. Good luck with that!
Additional thoughts:
I've plenty of experience trying to burn hydrogen in a reciprocating engine. It works. Kind of. They did it in WWII. JCB are doing it now in tractors. There's been lots of research in Australia on it. But the engines don't last very long. Due to how easy it is to get the hydrogen to burn, its very difficult to precisely control ignition timing. So you end up with a lot of knock, and the engine wears out. There's also issues with lubrication, etc.
Fuel cell vehicles need a large battery, as fuel cells can't ramp up/down in power output very quickly- so you need a battery as a buffer. So in practice, a fuel-cell EV is actually an electric vehicle, plus a hydrogen tank and fuel cell. I'm not a smart man, but that makes the economics of FCEV vs EV pretty clear..
For passenger cars, this talk of EV and range issues is nonsense in 2021. There are plenty of EVs that have >500km range. Some you can buy today in Australia. The latest Hyundai EV, the Ioniq 5, has a range of 480km, and can recharge from 10-80% in 18 minutes. Show me a petrol car journey where someone drives 480km and doesn't stop for at least 18 minutes...
Sure, to get that sort of recharge rate you need the latest EVs and the latest standard chargers. And there's not many of these in Australia. But the technology can do it, and it exists at scale already. Just not here. Sigh.
Sure, the Ioniq 5 is not a cheap car, at around $72k in Australia. But you can buy an MG ZS today in Australia for $40k, with close to 300km of range. The direction of this industry is clear.
The talk that EVs can't tow is, again, old fashioned nonsense. The Rivian R1T (announced for Australia, available in the US) and Hummer (about to be released in US) have towing capacities in excess of 3500kg. Their range unladen is 500km. Someone has already towed a large car across the US using a Rivian. Yes, it was a bit of a PITA, but it is doable.
Average car changeover time in Australia is 8 years, which makes things slower here..
Electric short-journey buses are happening in large numbers in the US and China. The economics work for shorthaul.
EVs work, and will be everywhere in passenger cars, even in our neolithic Australia, over coming years.
I won't hold my breath for a hydrogen-powered truck. Or plane (beyond some research project).
There's plenty of examples of electric short-trip aircraft. They make sense for training and what I think of as the "jet ski" model- go for a short buzz for sh*ts and giggles. Very low cost to operate. Bugger all noise.
Fossil fuels are energy dense, and hard to replace. But we can address a lot of our climate challenges doing the easy stuff- convert the short-haul and passenger car fleets. That leaves lots of fossil fuel in the ground for long-haul transport. And we deal with those CO2 emissions some other way.
-C