Decarbonisation Of Food Cold Chain Through Integrated Hydrogen Technologies

Find Similar History 15 Claim Ownership Request Data Change Add Favourite

Title
Decarbonisation Of Food Cold Chain Through Integrated Hydrogen Technologies

CoPED ID
6db9521e-fc8d-4d0c-b90d-45181fbfe112

Status
Active


Value
£4,862,910

Start Date
Aug. 31, 2021

End Date
Aug. 31, 2024

Description

More Like This


The UK government is committed to reducing carbon emissions to net zero by 2050. In order to meet this commitment, it is essential that heating and cooling is decarbonised as it accounts for over a third of CO2 emissions in the UK. A potential solution would be the establishment of a hydrogen-based energy infrastructure facilitating the replacement of fossil fuels by sustainable energy sources. Central to a future energy system based upon hydrogen would be the deployment of hydrogen fuel cells (HFCs) to convert sustainably derived hydrogen (e.g. from solar and wind) to electricity, as they are highly efficient, economic and scalable. The global market for fuel cells is projected to reach US$14. 6 billion by 2027, and the global demand for hydrogen is now over 70Mt rising by 5 Mt a year. If hydrogen is to be an integral part of the UK's future energy system and assist in decarbonisation of heating and cooling, then technologies are required to facilitate the safe and efficient delivery of hydrogen to end use applications. We propose the development of integrated hydrogen technologies that will simultaneously provide the controlled release of hydrogen to service fuel cell power needs and cold production. Key to this technology is the endothermic decomposition of a metal hydride (MH) store to generate cooling, with the resultant hydrogen supplying a fuel cell. By transitioning to a hydrogen-based net-zero economy, our new technology provides an opportunity to assist in the decarbonisation of the UK food chain (agricultural production, manufacturing, distribution, retail and consumption) which is responsible for 18% of the total UK energy use or 115 MtCO2 emissions.

Sanliang Ling PI_PER
Robert Cluley COI_PER
Gavin Walker COI_PER
David Grant COI_PER
Alastair Stuart RESEARCH_COI_PER

Subjects by relevance
  1. Hydrogen
  2. Emissions
  3. Fuel cells
  4. Fuels
  5. Renewable energy sources
  6. Energy policy
  7. Sustainable development
  8. Energy production (process industry)
  9. Greenhouse gases
  10. Energy consumption (energy technology)
  11. Future

Extracted key phrases
  1. Hydrogen fuel cell
  2. UK food chain
  3. Total UK energy use
  4. Integrated hydrogen technology
  5. Food Cold chain
  6. Decarbonisation
  7. Resultant hydrogen
  8. Service fuel cell power need
  9. UK government
  10. Future energy system
  11. Sustainable energy source
  12. Energy infrastructure
  13. Fossil fuel
  14. New technology
  15. Carbon emission

Related Pages

UKRI project entry

UK Project Locations