低碳能源市场中可再生氢的地缘政治

Q1 Arts and Humanities
Fridolin Pflugmann, Nicola de Blasio
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引用次数: 38

摘要

可再生氢能源在政治和商业上的发展势头日益强劲。但要充分利用它,需要扩展技术、降低成本、部署有利的基础设施,并制定适当的政策和市场结构。由于可再生氢可能是无碳能源难题的重要组成部分,因此探索其地缘政治影响是相关的,因为它使政策制定者能够驾驭新能源世界。要考虑的关键变量是技术、基础设施、环境、金融、全球市场和地缘政治。本文以可再生氢为重点,提供了一种方法来构建这些变量,解决它们带来的挑战以及潜在的机会。如果大规模采用,我们相信未来氢市场的动态将类似于今天的天然气市场-具有类似的地缘政治动态的潜力。我们的分析表明,各国可能会根据其资源禀赋和基础设施潜力,在未来的可再生氢系统中扮演特定的角色。因此,欧洲和东南亚资源贫乏国家未来的地缘政治现实可能与目前的现实非常相似,因为它们可能继续依赖能源进口。我们还可能看到新的出口冠军国家的出现,比如澳大利亚和北非。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Geopolitics of Renewable Hydrogen in Low-Carbon Energy Markets
Renewable hydrogen is enjoying increasing political and business momentum. But taking full advantage of it will require scaling technologies, reducing costs, deploying enabling infrastructure, and defining appropriate policies and market structures. Since renewable hydrogen could be an important piece in the carbon-free energy puzzle, it is relevant to explore its geopolitical implications as it enables policy makers to navigate a new energy world. Key variables to consider are technology, infrastructure, environment, finance, global markets, and geopolitics. Focusing on renewable hydrogen, this paper provides a methodology to frame these variables, address the challenges they cause, and the potential opportunities. If adopted at scale, we believe the dynamics of future hydrogen markets would be similar to today’s natural gas markets – with the potential for similar geopolitical dynamics. Our analysis shows that countries are likely to assume specific roles in future renewable hydrogen systems based on their resource endowment and infrastructure potential. As a result, future geopolitical realities of resource-poor countries in Europe and South-East Asia might look very similar to the present realities, as energy import dependency might continue. We may also witness an emergence of new export champions, such as Australia and North Africa.
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来源期刊
自引率
0.00%
发文量
10
期刊介绍: Geopolitics, History, and International Relations publishes mainly original empirical research and review articles focusing on hot emerging topics, e.g. digital diplomacy, online political participation, data activism, fake social media news, algorithmic governance, computational politics, Internet terrorism, autonomous weapons systems, virtual history, innovative data-driven smart urban ecosystems, etc. This journal considers only manuscripts having a high integrative value in the current Scopus- and Web of Science-indexed literature.
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