Under the patronage of His Highness Sheikh Mohamed Bin Zayed Al Nahyan, President of the United Arab Emirates
تحت رعاية صاحب السمو الشيخ محمد بن زايد آل نهيان، رئيس دولة الامارات العربية المتحدة
Hydrogen has gained prominence for its potential as a transformative energy carrier, with expectations for the potential advantages of low-carbon hydrogen continuing to rise. Yet, hydrogen's share in the energy mix is modest, in part due to rising project costs, scalability challenges, the need for facilitating policy, unrealised investment and the lack of enabling infrastructure.
To enable and accelerate low-carbon hydrogen capabilities, strategic policy incentives and subsidy frameworks are planned or being enacted on multiple economic fronts to advance progress, including infrastructure investment, jobs creation, national energy independence and security, improved energy efficiency, and carbon capture and storage technology advances. Collaboration within national agencies and with the private sector are driving R&D, investment and project development on hydrogen technologies and infrastructure for the production, purification, distribution, storage and use of hydrogen and fuel cells.
By 2050, low-carbon hydrogen demand could account for over 75% of total hydrogen demand. In the next few years, nearly all new hydrogen production coming online is expected to be low-carbon hydrogen, coinciding with an expected phaseout of grey hydrogen. To meet these projections, the production of hydrogen and its derivatives will have to overcome challenges, including technology scalability, rising project costs and limited electrolyser capacities. In addition, infrastructure build-out for large-scale hydrogen use - including pipelines and import/export terminals – will need to take place to ensure low-carbon hydrogen supply can be traded and transported to meet demand. And, at the same time as accelerating low- and no-emission hydrogen production, driving hydrogen offtake across sectors at scale, such as heavy industry and transportation, will be key to realising hydrogen’s potential in the energy transition.
The global hydrogen market is forecast to grow to over US$1.4 trillion annually by 2050, with green hydrogen supply accounting for most of it. A 2023 Deloitte report projects developing countries will account for nearly 70% of the market, creating as many as 1.5 million jobs per year between 2030 and 2050, and up to two million jobs per year globally between 2030 and 2050. Opportunities to benefit from the economic stimulus of a new hydrogen economy will require supportive policies and regulations, to build the required capabilities and ensure a competitive local industry that can meet global demand.
As national hydrogen strategies, roadmaps and targets are embedded into energy strategies, continued and increased government and private sector support is needed to advance the hydrogen market. Progress must still be made against the challenges of technology, and infrastructure costs for producing and using hydrogen, demand generation for low emission hydrogen and incentivising policy to de-risk investment. Technological innovation, accelerated project deployment, enabling national and international regulatory frameworks, the development of global certification and reporting methodologies, will all have roles in delivering the benefits of a low-carbon hydrogen economy.
The Strategic Conference harvested insights on the latest thinking, trends and solutions around emissions, energy efficiencies and disruptive technology from those at the forefront of delivering the strategies, business models and technology innovations.
The Decarbonisation Conference offered an inclusive forum dedicated to finding credible solutions that can deliver the energy system of the future, while rapidly decarbonising the energy systems of today. Sessions explored innovation, international collaboration and digitalisation as key enablers of progress, accelerated through robust policies and the adoption of high-impact technologies.
The Hydrogen Conference convened industry leaders to discuss these developments and chart a path forward. The conference focused on hydrogen’s integration into global economies, address technological innovations, and support the development of strategies to scale up the hydrogen economy and accelerate the energy transition.
The Finance & Investment Conference offered a platform for experts across finance, energy, and policy to activate finance and investment needed to fast-track the global energy transition.
The Digitalisation and Technology Conference spotlighted industry progress and inspired collaborative action to fully unlock the opportunities presented by the integration and adoption of Fourth Industrial Revolution technologies. The Conference explored the development of new materials, and bring together pioneers to showcase the latest innovations, AI and digital technologies needed to enable a sustainable energy transition.
The Maritime & Logistics Conference shaped pragmatic and transparent discussions and fostered the cross-industry collaboration needed to find tangible decarbonisation solutions that can accelerate industry-wide transformation, a critical step in delivering a clean energy future while maintaining equitable economic growth.
The Voices of Tomorrow Conference featured four individual streams to tackle the most pertinent agendas supporting the UAE Consensus and the important opportunities for the wider community to work multilaterally on commitments to deliver a just energy transition. Topics included bridging the gap between the global north and the global south, strengthening global alliances through intergovernmental and non-governmental organisations, ensuring equal representation from underrepresented groups, and fortifying the leaders of tomorrow.
Organised by SPE, the Technical Conference brought together the brightest minds and technical experts from across the energy value chain – the changemakers at the forefront of engineering, technology, and industry innovation.
The Downstream Technical Conference explored the role of downstream in a rapidly evolving energy landscape, emphasising the importance of circular economies, operational excellence, and energy efficiency.