I already responded to the first part in a previous post. It's irrelevant for the long term strategies. Just as new battery tech on youtube doesn't affect policies and strategies for large car makers who already know what they will use and build over the next years. You learned about Haber-Bosch a few pages ago, watched some vids on youtube, and here you go with crystal ball conjecture, or what we call translated "watching coffee ground" (tea leaf reading but with coffee). Which, doesn't fit with the thread title. Given that none of those musings affect policy and fits better
here. Perhaps first look at what is actually going on instead of what might be. It's not like we have a whole lot of time left and how that time is used is decided now, has already been decided. "We'll see" is N/A.
The context was the industry using hydrogen, of which steel is just a small part, which Europe isn't going to move to Africa or ME. The steel factories itself aren't simple factories you pack up and move and hire a few natives to work in. The whole concept of the EU has its roots in steel...
EU obviously isn't going to move the industry that creates the expected annual demand for which they are now building the billions of dollars costing infrastructure and making deals with other countries. These are not deals and contracts for a few years... One of the main challenges is making it both affordable and profitable. Just like gas from Ukraine. Investors will make their money back and then some before they invest in other method which then still are only interesting if they don't raise the costs even more. No reason to assume it will be any different this time given who's in charge. Ports to transport 'electricity' are being built already. The reality for the next decades is that many ships will transport compressed hydrogen and ammonia across the globe, created with the electrolysers built now.
I posted about Australia and EU's hydrogen network almost a year ago in the Climate thread:
THIS is Why the Grid is Ready for Electric Cars! 94,510 views Feb 9, 2023 #norway #windturbine #power Can the National Grid really cope with electric vehicles?! That's the question we get asked A LOT on the Fully Charged Show and so we thought it was time to ask the experts. In this episode...
rollitup.org
Megawatts and Gigawatts...
From EU rules for renewable hydrogen:
"
The Commission estimates that around 500 terawatt-hours of renewable electricity will be needed for renewable hydrogen production in
the EU by 2030 (that is, around 18 % of the EU's total electricity production in 2022), and around 46 % of today's renewable electricity production [of which most days none is surpluss]"
"
In 2021, 70 % of electrolysers worldwide were alkaline, and 25 % were of the proton exchangemembrane type. Other types of electrolysers are less mature and have a minimal share."
It's a nice idea... building renewable energy sources across the globe, use it to create hydrogen, then come up with something better, and then Africa can use the wind parks and solar panels on their land to meet there own targets... Sounds like something that could happen, in a different universe.