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by harg
1376 days ago
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H2 may well be a more potent GHG when compared to CO2, but it's tendency to remain in the atmosphere for a long time is a factor than shouldn't be ignored and doesn't seem to be mentioned by your first citation. I.e. H2 may be 16x more potent than CO2 but if it reacts away within hours/days/[<16th of the time that CO2 stays around] then its overall contribution to warming will be less than CO2. (I don't know what this figure is, but I believe Hydrogen is pretty reactive so doesn't tend to stick around that long) From your second citation: > The evidence base relating to non-GHG emissions from end-use in heating applications is almost non-existent It then says that a single study: > suggests there is potential for up to six times higher point NOx emissions compared with natural gas". and that it could be significantly reduced with catalytic converters. The points you raise are not nearly as unequivocal as you make them out to be. I also don't feel like Hydrogen is going to solve all of our problems - it has many problems that needs to be overcome. But it could well play a role in certain areas when it comes to getting off fossil fuels, so studies into more efficient production of it will surely be valuable. |
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Usually these numbers take that in consideration and the two are compared over a certain number of years, i.e. 100 years. A quick Google seems to confirm this, H2 is ~10 more potent than CO2 over 100 years.