
The idea of using hydrogen as a fuel or an energy source has been around for a long time. Hydrogen is the most common element in the universe, but most of it is locked up in various chemical compounds, such as water. Hydrogen is a clean fuel; burning it or using it to generate electricity in a fuel cell produces no greenhouse gas emissions. But more than 99% of the hydrogen that people current produce is obtained by methods that result in greenhouse gas emissions.
A new study by scientists at the University of Oxford, the University of Durham in the UK, and the University of Toronto looks at geological environments in which naturally occurring hydrogen could be hiding. According to the study, over the last billion years, the Earth’s continental crust is likely to have produced enough hydrogen to satisfy the energy needs of modern society for 170,000 years.
Much of that hydrogen is likely to have been lost or is inaccessible; most of it is not economically feasible to extract. But even the relatively small amount of hydrogen left could provide thousands of years of energy for us. We just have to be able to find it.
The researchers have developed what they call an “exploration recipe” which identifies where natural hydrogen might be located as well as where it could be commercially feasible to extract. These places with hydrogen have so-called reservoir rocks and geologic formations that prevent the gas from leaking into the atmosphere.
A few such places have already been identified such as one in Albania. There are various candidates to explore, even including an area in Kansas. The study’s authors have founded a company whose mission is to find these natural sources of hydrogen.
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Scientists Say Hidden Hydrogen Could Power the World for 170,000 Years
Photo, posted October 4, 2019, courtesy of Tony Sprezzatura via Flickr.
Earth Wise is a production of WAMC Northeast Public Radio
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