Currently, 95% of the hydrogen produced in France is of fossil origin, as is nearly 99% of that produced in the rest of the world. This hydrogen is most often obtained from the process of steam reforming methane, the main component of natural gas. Each kg of hydrogen produced this way emits 12 kg of CO2, and its cost price varies from 1 to 2.5 € per kg. Almost 45% of world production comes from this technique.
About 25% of hydrogen production comes from “co-production” of refined products from hydrocarbons, which is then called “fatal” hydrogen. Its production cost is variable since in this instance it is a “waste” from the production of other chemical elements, and therefore its carbon footprint is too.
A third method uses coal, burnt at very high temperature (1200 to 1500 ° C) to separate the hydrogen – which should be called dihydrogen H2 – from CO2, in the form of gas. This production, about 30% of the total, makes it possible to obtain hydrogen whose cost price per kg varies between 1.5€ and 3€ per kg, but releases 19 kg of CO2 per kg of hydrogen.
These are industrial models that make “gray” hydrogen. “Green” hydrogen, which only contributes less than 1% of world production (around 5% in France), comes from the use of low-carbon or renewable energies (solar, wind, etc.). The electrolysis of water, which allows a zero carbon footprint, represented only 0.1% of global hydrogen production in 2019, due to a relatively prohibitive cost compared to other production methods, one kg of hydrogen costing between 3€ and 12€ for its production alone (excluding the cost of transport, distribution, etc.).
To allow the large-scale deployment of “green hydrogen”, electrolysis from a renewable energy source is one of the future undertakings , and it is clearly one of the strategies traced through the 2020 recovery plan, to make France and Europe champions of “green” hydrogen production.