| dc.description.abstract |
This thesis investigates the economic viability of producing, storing, and exporting
green hydrogen from Niger to Europe, addressing a notable gap in existing research.
Niger has abundant solar energy potential, substantial agricultural waste, and
proximity to Europe; however, it is not currently involved in any global hydrogen
projects. The study uses a techno-economic evaluation approach, combining resource
assessment, cost modeling, and logistics analysis. It explores three hydrogen
production methods: biomass gasification, dark fermentation, and solar steam
methane reforming (SSMR), which uses methane derived from slaughterhouse blood.
Techno-economic modeling shows that the levelized cost of hydrogen (LCOH) from
biomass pathways is between 2.5 and 5.1 USD/kg. However, solar-assisted SSMR can
get lower values when the irradiation conditions are good and exceed 2,000
kWh/m²/year. Levelized cost of storage (LCOS) analysis compares various storage
options, such as compressed gaseous hydrogen and liquefied hydrogen. Compressed
hydrogen is a suitable choice for storage in small to medium-sized applications, while
liquefied hydrogen is better suited for long-distance exports at $5.98/kg. The export
route is evaluated through retrofitted oil pipelines to Europe at $ 0.85/ton/km.
Findings show that Niger's solar and agricultural waste resources make hydrogen
production competitive. Dark fermentation offers a decentralized option, gasification
provides scalability, and SSMR proves efficient when paired with solar power.
Retrofitted pipelines emerge as the most cost-effective long-term export solution.
Overall, results indicate Niger could become a new hydrogen supplier, aiding Europe
in achieving renewable energy goals, boosting local industry growth, increasing
energy access, and strengthening the economy. |
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