Africa’s first hydrogen plant seen producing electricity in 2024

Africa’s first hydrogen plant seen producing electricity in 2024
Canola plants blossom in a field beneath electricity pylons, as South African utility Eskom experiences frequent power outages, near Cape Town, South Africa, September 8, 2022. (Reuters)
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Updated 12 September 2022
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Africa’s first hydrogen plant seen producing electricity in 2024

Africa’s first hydrogen plant seen producing electricity in 2024
  • The project will see 85 MW of solar panels powering electrolyzers to produce hydrogen that can be stored

CAPE TOWN: French independent power producer HDF Energy expects its green hydrogen power plant in Namibia, Africa’s first, to start producing electricity by 2024, a senior company executive said on Monday.

Once operational, the 3.1 billion Namibian dollar ($181.25 million) Swakopmund project will supply clean electricity power, 24 hours a day all-year round, boosting electricity supply in the southern African nation that imports around 40 percent of its power from neighboring South Africa.

Namibia, one of the world’s sunniest and least densely populated countries, wants to harness its vast potential for solar and wind energy to produce green hydrogen and position the country as a renewable energy hub in Africa. Hydrogen is categorized “green” when it is made with renewable power and is seen as key to help decarbonize industry, though the technology remains immature and relatively costly.

The project will see 85 MW of solar panels powering electrolyzers to produce hydrogen that can be stored.

“Yearly we can produce 142 GWh, enough for 142,000 inhabitants and that is conservative,” said Nicolas Lecomte, HDF Energy director for southern Africa.

HDF Energy is also eyeing new projects across Africa and other parts of the world. “Soon after southern Africa you will see HDF developing projects in east Africa,” Lecomte told Reuters.

The EU also plans a deal with Namibia to support the country’s nascent green hydrogen sector and boost its own imports of the fuel, EU and Namibian officials said, as the bloc works to reduce its dependence on Russian energy.

Another company, Namibian-registered Hyphen Hydrogen Energy, is in talks with the country’s government to secure an implementation agreement for its planned $10 billion green hydrogen project that will produce some 350,000 tons of green hydrogen a year before 2030 for global and regional markets.