| Methane appears convenient at first glance, yes. Can be burnt in regular turbines, stoves, even some cars. But is it really the overall best way to store hydrogen? Methane has a rather high climate impact, compared to CO2. So if you're taking CO2 to synthesize methane from hydrogen, any leakage afterwards is much worse than leaking CO2. Why not use salt caverns (which are used to store natural gas and AFAIK can also store hydrogen directly) for seasonal storage at relatively low pressure? And if you're going to synthesize some other molecule from H2, why not make ammonia instead? There's already an ammonia powered FCEV semi (amogy.co). > .., you are going to have a bad time competing with battery storage. According to what I read here and there, battery storage won't be able to compete with chemical storage for the seasonal aspect, unless it becomes another order of magnitude cheaper or even more.
Also, for seasonal storage over months, batteries don't really make sense due to loss through discharge, right? |
Ammonia is still only about 50% round trip efficient and I'm sure it would be a huge part of the demand for green hydrogen production. But once again, ammonia is more useful as an agrochemical than as an energy storage medium.
With regards to seasonal storage, it isn't as big of an issue as you would think. Especially since seasonal declines in solar tend to coincide with seasonal increases in wind power.
https://energybyentech.com/blog/seasonal-variability-of-rene...