Argus
Argus â Hydrogen âno passing fadâ: IEA
Low-emissions hydrogen âis no passing fadâ and deployment could soon approach the âbreakneck expansionâ seen in solar and offshore wind in their early years, the Paris-based energy watchdog the IEA said.
The sector has seen âstarkâ corrections recently, but these are âtypical in emerging sectorsâ, the IEA said in its Energy Technology Perspectives 2026 report published today.
Progress has fallen short of expectations from the early 2020s. Many projects have been cancelled or delayed and numerous companies have gone bankrupt. This has led to production and consumption forecasts being cut sharply..
The IEA said,
But it is common for technologies to experience cycles of exuberance followed by consolidation before stabilising around the most viable opportunities
The hydrogen âbubble may be weakening, but it is far from burstingâ.
Investments in low-emissions hydrogen reached $8bn globally in 2025, an increase of 80pc from a year earlier, the watchdog said.
Global electrolyser capacity rose from 100MW in 2009 to 1GW in 2023. Capacity is expected to have reached close to 5GW by the end of 2025, and China will account for roughly 40pc of this, the IEA said.
Based on final investment decisions, global electrolyser capacity could reach 26GW by 2030, another fivefold increase. Projects with a âstrong potential to be in operation by 2030â could lift this to about 65GW. That growth path would mirror the early scale-up of solar and offshore wind, the IEA said.
Including other low-emissions production routes, output could reach 4.2mn t/yr from projects with âcommitted investmentsâ, and about 10mn t/yr when likely plants are included.
Governments must offer more targeted support to unlock the project pipeline, the watchdog said. This includes stimulating demand in existing hydrogen applications and building enabling infrastructure. It warned of challenges for new projects, including competition from data centres and other energy-intensive sectors for power supply and for capital for supporting infrastructure.
The IEA said recent increases in electrolyser costs â driven by inflation and supply chain pressure â may reverse in the coming years thanks to larger scales and learnings. It sees some regions, most notably China, on track to close the gap between renewable hydrogen and conventional production by 2030. Even in parts of Europe, supportive policies could narrow the gap to below $1/kg by then, it said.
By Stefan Krumpelmann
READ the latest news shaping the hydrogen market at Hydrogen Central
Argus â Hydrogen âno passing fadâ: IEA, source
How it works
Once you click Generate, Ollama reads this article and crafts 5 comprehension questions. Your answers are graded against the article content â general knowledge won't be enough. Score 70+ to count toward your certificate.
Questions are cached â you'll always get the same 5 for this article.