Is it possible for the Mediterranean to become Europe’s leading energy source?

Is it possible for the Mediterranean to become Europe’s leading energy source?



Can the Mediterranean become Europe’s energy powerhouse?

Tourists on Mallorca might now marvel at a new attraction on the Mediterranean island: a miniature economy entirely energised by “green” hydrogen. At its heart, ‍two solar‍ plants power an “electrolyser”, which splits water into oxygen and hydrogen, ⁣creating carbon-free fuel. ⁤The hydrogen can propel buses, be injected into ⁢the island’s gas grid and power​ fuel cells at hotels and the port. “The project shows what is possible,” says Belén Linares, head of innovation at Acciona Energía, ​a⁢ renewable-energy‌ firm that is one of the ⁣project’s investors.

There is​ one snag: the hydrogen has yet ⁣to materialise. Because of ⁢a design flaw, the electrolyser, ⁤which is made by‍ Cummins, ‌an American firm, has​ been⁤ recalled. Importing green hydrogen, which is derived from renewable ⁤sources, is impractical. Buses ​and fuel cells stand unused. A newly elected local government also appears less interested. The previous administration‍ talked “a lot of hot air”, according to a quote in the local press by‍ the new mayor of Palma, the island’s⁣ capital.

Boundless possibilities, or hot air? The ⁣same question also hangs over a wider green-hydrogen economy, which European governments hope⁤ to see ‌emerge in ⁢the Mediterranean basin, turning the region into a sun-fuelled counterpart to a wind-driven northern dynamo already taking shape‍ around the North Sea.​ The ​prize is large. If plans for Europe’s southern ‍powerhouse ⁤go well it will give the‍ continent access to cheap ⁣renewable energy and allow it to clean up its carbon-spewing heavy ⁢industry.

2023-11-13 15:58:18
Original from www.economist.com
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