Title: TOWARDS HYDROGEN ECONOMY IN ICELAND
1TOWARDS HYDROGEN ECONOMY IN ICELAND
- Hannes Jonsson, Bragi Árnason and Thorsteinn I.
Sigfússon - University of Iceland
- Chemistry and Physics Dpts.
2Iceland
A big basalt rock
No raw materials
No fossil fuel
70 of the export is fish, 20 is aluminum and
ferrosilicium
Most other consumer goods need to be imported
3Geothermal power
High T sources are located near the fault, can be
used to generate electricity Low T sources are
almost everywhere and can be used for space
heating
4Use of Geothermal Power in Iceland
- Over 90 of houses are heated with geothermal
water, low T - A total of 20 TWh/year of electrical energy is
economically harnessable from high T geothermal
sources - Up to now, only 1 TWh/year has been harnessed
-
5Hydroelectric Power
- Iceland is mountainous and has several large
glaciers (including the largest one in Europe)
and hydroelectric power is mainly generated using
waterfalls in glacial rivers up in the
highlands - Total estimated potential of 35 TWh/year,
currently only 7 TWh/year used
6Overview of energy need and potential production
in Iceland
- A total of 55 TWh/year of electrical energy is
economically harnessable from hydro and
geothermal sources - Up to now, only 8 TWh/year have been harnessed
- To replace all imported fossil fuel would
require 5 TWh/year (the population of Iceland is
290 thousand people)
7The Use of Fossil Fuel in Iceland
- 35 of the energy used in Iceland comes from
imported fossil fuel, of that 1/3 is consumed by
the fishing fleet, 1/3 by transport sector and
1/3 by industry (mainly graphite electrodes in
smelters) - Icelanders generate 11 tons of CO2 per capita per
year
8Hydrogen economy in Iceland
- Use electrical energy generated from
hydroelectric and geothermal sources to produce
hydrogen - Replace fossil fuels with hydrogen in buses/cars
and fishing boats - Benefits Improved trade balance, use of local
resources, technological spinoffs and lower CO2
emission
9HYDROGEN PRODUCTION COST
- The cost of hydrogen produced in Iceland as a
function of plant size, electricity price and
assuming Norsk Hydro technology is well known, a
fertilizer plant has produced hydrogen
electrolytically for 50 years - Assuming for example 100 MW plant and electricity
price 0.02 US/kWh, hydrogen produced in this way
would be up to 2-3 times more expensive than
presently imported gasoline when calculated on
the basis of energy content (cost of 20 per
barrel)
10Hydrogen production cost vs. electricity price
- The figure shows the hydrogen production cost
based on the Norsk Hydro technology. The three
lowest lines show the production cost as a
function of electricity price for plant sizes 40
MW, 100 MW and 200 MW respectively. The
uppermost line shows the production cost for a
200 MW plant, which would be in operation at half
capacity, for instance 12 hr per day, and thus
could eventually be operated on off-peak
electricity.
11PEM fuel cell
- In case where hydrogen is used to power PEM fuel
cells, currently in rapid development, the energy
efficiency is 2-3 times higher than in
conventional - IC-engines
- Considering both production cost and energy
efficiency, fuel cell based transport and fishing
utilising hydrogen produced from electricity in
Iceland is approaching competitiveness compared
to fossil fuels
12Endorsed by the government
- The Prime Minister, Minister of Industry and
Minister of Environment signed a letter of intent
on 27.10.1998
13ICELANDIC NEW ENERGY LTD.
Joint-venture company owned by Vistorka
hf. DaimlerChrysler AG Norsk Hydro ASA Shell
Hydrogen The majority partner Vistorka
(EcoEnergy Ltd.) is a holding company owned by
public and private enterprises and institutions
which play a vital role in research, development
and financing of new industrial projects in
Iceland
14Icelandic New Energy Ltd. (cont.)
The purpose of the company
To set up a joint venture to investigate the
potential for eventually replacing the use of
fossil fuels in Iceland with hydrogen and create
the worlds first hydrogen economy
15Roadmap to hydrogen economy
1. Fuel cell bus demonstration
Demonstration program
Gradual introduction into bus fleet
Time
2000
2002
16Projection of hydrogen use in Iceland
5
90
4
,
3
81
4
60
3
h
Hydrogen (000 tonn)
W
T
2
30
1
0
0
2000
2010
2020
2030
2040
2050
Rough forecast for the usage of hydrogen as fuel
in cars and ships. Technical developments during
the next few years could considerably influence
the graph.
17Why a pilot project in Iceland?
- Iceland has enough energy from sustainable,
nearly CO2 free sources - Iceland has similar standards and transportation
system as most other developed countries and
therefore the results can easily be adapted
elsewhere - Iceland has experience in converting from one
energy source to another (space heating with
geothermal water) - Reasonably large scale project in a fairly
isolated location - New hydrogen technology needs to be evaluated
under severe weather conditions!
18The ECTOS-project (2001-2005)
- The ECTOS-project is a 4 year
- project, 2001-2005.
- The project can be split into
- two key phases
- The first two years
- Preparation, establishing infrastructure,
maintenance facility, - economic/social research, etc.
- The second two years
- The actual demonstration of three H2 buses and
commercial infrastructure
19ECTOS-project, Infrastructure
- Creating and integrating hydrogen infrastructure
into the existing urban setting in Reykjavik
(2002-2003) - Production On site electrolyser (using renewable
electricity to split water into hydrogen and
oxygen). Only supply WATER and ELECTRICITY - Storing 1 compressor units delivering hydrogen
at 440 bar - Distribution on site of gaseous hydrogen directly
on to vehicles.
20ECTOS project Partners
EC supports the project Around 40 of the budget
21The ECTOS EU Project (cont.)
- The total project is around 7.0 million
EUR - The European Commission support for the project
is 2.85 million EUR - The remaining 4.15 million EUR will be financed
50 by foreign partners and 50 by
domestic companies
22 CUTE and ECTOS
Reykjavik
Stockholm
Hamburg
London
Amsterdam
Luxemburg
Stuttgart
Madrid
Barcelona
Porto
23HYDROGEN POWERED CITY BUS
Three buses will arrive in Reykjavik in September
- PEM fuel cells fueled by hydrogen stored on
board as pressurised gas in sufficient amount to
operate the bus - 250 km on each tank filling
24Hydrogen Powered City Bus (cont.)
- This is the same distance as the Reykjavik city
buses are run each day on the average - A city bus fleet also can be operated from one
filling station wich makes no need for
complicated infrastructure for distribution of
the fuel - No further purification of electrolytically
produced hydrogen is required for use in the PEM
fuel cells
25Hydrogen fuelling station opened in April
Can produce 150 kg of hydrogen per day, delivers
hydrogen gas at 440 bars
26HYDROGEN POWERED PRIVATE CARS
Next step
-
- Onboard storage of pressurised hydrogen gas
in hydrogen powered PEM fuel cell private cars
seems feasible but has some limitations and
safety concerns
Main problem is storage
Liquid hydrogen too expensive and the losses are
too large
New hydrogen storage solutions are needed
27HYDROGEN POWERED FISHING VESSELS
- For fishing vessels, fuel cells in the megawatt
range need to become commercially available. -
- Space limitations for long journeys at sea seem
to make it difficult to store the fuel on board
in the form of pure hydrogen. Solid state storage
(metal hydrides) is being considered or even
hydrogen bound in methanol as a short term
solution
28HYDROGEN RELATED RESEARCH AT THE UNIVERSITY OF
ICELAND
- Thermoelectricity (spin-off Varmaraf)
- Thermal management of metal hydride storage
- New solid state storage materials (theoretical
and experimental research) - Production of methanol from emission gases of the
aluminum and ferrosilicon smelters
29Summary
- Transformation to hydrogen economy could be
realised in Iceland during the next decades and
finished around mid century - The hydrogen will be produced from ample
electrical power obtained from sustainable
geothermal and hydroelectric sources - Icelandic New Energy and The University of
Iceland and their international partners are
working to reach this goal
30Possible methanol production in Iceland (cont.)
- Replacing 95 of the imported fossil fuels
presently consumed by the transport and fishing
sectors by methanol would result in a total of up
to more than 50 reduction of CO2
emissionfrom the present situation
31TRANSFORMATION OF ICELAND INTO THE HYDROGEN
ECONOMY
- Phase 1PEM fuel cell bus demonstration project.
Up to three city buses in public transportation
in Reykjavik - Phase 2Gradual replacement of the Reykjavik
city bus fleet and possibly other bus fleets by
PEM fuel cell buses
32Transformation of Iceland into the hydrogen
economy (cont.)
- Phase 5Gradual replacement of the present
fishing fleet by fuel cell powered vessels - In this way, transformation of Iceland into a
hydrogen economy could possibly be completed in
2030 - 2040
33THE ECTOS EUROPEAN UNION PROJECT
- The key objective in the ECTOS project is to do
combined demonstration and research on hydrogen
infrastructure and operation of fuel cell buses
powered by hydrogen - The project consists of building a hydrogen
refilling station in Iceland, with on-site
production of hydrogen by electrolysis using
renewable energy and operating 3 PEM fuel cell
buses in normal service by the Reykjavik
Municipal Bus Corporation
34Thermoelectricity - Novelty in the Icelandic
hydrogen research and development
- Thermoelectric generator, based on solid state
methods, is using low temperature geothermal
water to generate electricity for hydrogen
production and to assist metal hydride storage
management
35POSSIBLE METHANOL PRODUCTION IN ICELAND
- Assuming that the furnaces at the ferrosilicon
plant and the electrolytic cells of the aluminium
smelters could be enclosed, which technically
seems not impossible, the carbon oxides in the
gas emitted could be used together with
additional hydrogen to produce methanol - In this way sufficient amount of methanol could
be produced to replace 95 of the fossil fuels
presently consumed by the transport and fishing
sectors in Iceland
36METHANOL OBTAINED BY COMBINING HYDROGEN AND
EMISSION GASES FROM METALS INDUSTRY IN ICELAND
- When looking for carbon containing resources for
methanol production the attention is drawn
towards carbon oxides emitted from the metals
industry - In fact both aluminium smelting and ferrosilicon
production emit vast amounts of carbon oxide
containing gases - Basically these gases stem from the use of carbon
in both cases