This course is intended for those in business, commercial and strategically focused roles within the energy sector; in particular those responsible for environmental matters, business sustainability and business transformation in areas such as oil & gas, hydrogen and industrial energy usage.
Green hydrogen is central to the energy transition. Accordingly, the scale of electrolyser production is in an exponential phase of growth. This course will provide essential insights to support the decisions that need to be taken to ramp up electrolyser production and de-risk electrolyser procurement.
This course aims to explore hydrogen as a sustainable energy carrier by focusing on its production, storage, and applications. Through presentations, case analyses, and interactive discussions, participants will gain insights into the methodologies for assessing the sustainability of hydrogen energy, its potential to aid the energy transition, and its applicability across various sectors.
This course includes an overhaul and introduction to sustainability in the context of the hydrogen supply chain recognizing investment approaches through ESG metrics and exporting criteria with close emphasis on the EU’s CBAM requirements.
Throughout the course, your expert trainer will separate what is really happening in the market from some of the headlines and hype, helping you to identify credible near-term opportunities for your business, along with the associated risks. He will evaluate and quantify barriers to long-term scalability and illustrate throughout using examples and benchmarks taken from a global perspective.
An in depth analysis of the business case and investment analysis for the current batch of electrolyser based projects. A theme of the session is ‘Mind the Gap’ the difference between hope and reality for electrolyser based projects due to gaps due to capacity growth, operating performance and learning curve costs ; and hence the gap between hope of financial investment decisions and financial closure with reality of many fewer than expected.
If you are investing in the production of hydrogen, an appreciation of the alternatives is required. White hydrogen may feature as one of these alternatives in the future, either as your source, or a competitive option to your mode of production. Understanding the market drivers and the economics of the most competitive sources is essential. This course will provide insights into all these areas.
This course will provide tangible examples of emerging and challenger technologies for green hydrogen generation from electrolysis. Many of the electrolysis technologies covered in this course have the potential to become mainstream green hydrogen production routes in future decades and will challenge established equipment and well-known electrolyser industry names.
This course is designed to give a clear examination of the factors that will determine the economics and competitiveness of hydrogen produced by electrolysis. It will examine economics in terms of levelised cost and project financial modelling, assessing the impacts of factors such as capital cost reductions, electrolyser efficiency, load factor, co-product sales and financing costs.
If you are investing in the Power to X, X to power or the full cycle of Power to X to Power, then an appreciation of the technologies involved is required. Understanding the market drivers and options for the potential molecules for use in Power to X to Power is essential. This course will provide insights support all these processes.