Clean hydrogen will grow 100-fold from today’s levels, according to DNV’s Energy Transition Outlook Hydrogen to 2060 report.
Overall hydrogen
volumes will grow by 170 per cent and will see cumulative investments of $3.2 trillion
to 2060.
China is set to lead
that expansion, accounting for 35 per cent of new hydrogen production and use
over the forecast period.
Clean hydrogen uptake
is expected to be strongest in emerging demand sectors by 2060, led by
steelmaking (18 per cent of total clean hydrogen use), aviation (18 per cent)
and maritime (15 per cent).
The established demand sectors, fertiliser and
methanol, are also decarbonising large parts of their supply chains and are
each expected to account for around 13 per cent of clean hydrogen use.
The hydrogen industry has
faced several challenges in recent years and this is reflected in the Outlook.
DNV has revised down its
mid-century hydrogen outlook by 35 per cent since our previous hydrogen
forecast in 2022 primarily due to a lack of policy support which has led to early
ambition failing to convert to large-scale projects.
The forecast also
reflects continued progress in electrification technologies, which has reduced
hydrogen’s role in some sectors previously expected to adopt it.
“The hydrogen industry
is poised for growth, but it is a fragile stance. Hydrogen completes
the most difficult aspects of the decarbonisation
drive that so many nations have committed to. In driving fossil
dependency out of critical sectors, hydrogen also contributes
meaningfully to energy security. It is time for policymakers to study
carefully the practical progress that has been made and to act decisively,”
said Ditlev Engel, CEO, Energy Systems at DNV.
DNV forecasts that
half of new renewable electrolysis-based capacity added by 2030 will be
installed in Europe and China.
China holds 60 per
cent of global electrolyser manufacturing capacity and it will couple this with
its solar and wind capacity to become the dominant global renewable hydrogen
producer.
Energy
security becoming a decisive driver
Energy security will
likely emerge as a decisive driver of hydrogen investment and policy, as
governments in energy importing countries seek to reduce exposure to volatile
fossil fuel markets and protect critical industries.
The current geopolitical situation is
accelerating final investment decisions, with 10 Mt/yr of renewable
electrolysis-based capacity added by 2030 on top of 1.5 Mt/yr installed in 2025.
Additionally, instability
in the Middle East will likely boost coal-based hydrogen used for ammonia and
fertiliser production in the medium-term to maintain food
security.
Closing the safety
confidence gap
DNV also warns that
growth depends on closing a safety confidence gap and documenting emissions
reductions credibly.
Lessons from pilots
are informing industrial-scale design and procedures, but scaling is not a
copy-and-paste exercise for either cost or safety assumptions.
Stronger standardisation and whole-system
approaches to safety, verification, and certification are needed to build trust
and enable substantial investment capital.
“Going forward, it is
about fine-tuning the regulations, implementing these in legislation, and
verifying safety concepts, documenting technical performance, and certifying
emission reductions. That is how renewable and low carbon hydrogen can make a
difference for hard-to-electrify sectors.” said Magnus Killingland, Global
Segment Lead Hydrogen. -OGN/ TradeArabia News Service

