Blue hydrogen has increasingly been positioned as a pragmatic, cheaper source of clean hydrogen that could meet demand in the early stages of the energy transition.
As a nascent industry – evidenced by recent data showing that committed investments fall short of the levels required to meet 2030 targets – blue hydrogen, derived from natural gas with carbon capture, has been heralded as the pathway to drive action.
“In 10 years, I don’t think anybody will be using grey hydrogen. Everybody will be using blue,” Air Products President and CEO, Seifi Ghasemi, boldly told an investor call this May.
This is a paid article, to read the article in full you can
sign in if you are subscribed or
subscribe today.

