PANAMA, Aug 09 (IPS) – In 2021, the Panama Canal welcomed a French experimental ship on a world tour, the Power Observer, the primary electrical vessel powered by a mixture of renewable energies and a hydrogen manufacturing system based mostly on seawater.
The vessel exemplifies Panama’s aspiration to turn out to be a regional hub for hydrogen, probably the most considerable gasoline on the planet, however faces the existential choice of whether or not to generate it from renewable vitality or fossil gasoline.
This Central American nation of simply over 4 million individuals is creating, albeit belatedly, the primary part of its roadmap to materialise the Nationwide Inexperienced Hydrogen and Derivatives Technique, authorized in 2023.
For Juan Lucero, coordinator of the Ministry of the Atmosphere’s Nationwide Local weather Transparency Platform, inexperienced hydrogen can be the best choice, given its renewable vitality, strategic place and the affect of worldwide insurance policies to scale back greenhouse gasoline (GHG) emissions in sea transport.
“Panama has pure gasoline, and corporations are taken with participating on this enterprise, on this case blue hydrogen. If Panama needs to be a hub, then blue is an efficient possibility,” he advised IPS.
He careworn that “for Panama, it has at all times been a precedence to offer providers, to be an vitality hub. Now we have custom, expertise, historical past, as a hub for supplying bunker (a petroleum distillate) ships. The thought is to realize that transition.”
The manufacturing of hydrogen, which the fossil gas business has been utilizing for many years, has now been reworked right into a colored palette, relying on its origin.
Thus, “gray” comes from gasoline and is dependent upon adapting pipelines to move it.
By comparability, “blue” has the identical origin, however the carbon dioxide (CO2) emanating from it’s captured by crops. Manufacturing relies on steam methane reforming, which includes mixing the primary gasoline with the second and heating it to acquire a synthesis gasoline. Nonetheless, this releases CO2, the primary GHG chargeable for world warming.
In the meantime, “inexperienced” hydrogen is obtained by electrolysis, separating it from the oxygen in water via an electrical present.
The latter kind joins the vary of fresh sources to drive vitality transition away from fossil fuels and thus develop a low-carbon financial system. At this time, nonetheless, hydrogen remains to be largely derived from fossil fuels.
In its completely different colors, Panama joins Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Paraguay, Peru and Uruguay in having nationwide hydrogen insurance policies.

Ambition
In 2022, the Panamanian authorities created the Excessive Degree Inexperienced Hydrogen and Inexperienced Hydrogen Technical committees to drive the roadmap in that route.
Nevertheless it has not made progress within the creation of free zones for commerce and storage of inexperienced hydrogen and derivatives; updating laws; and inspiring port actions to make use of electrical automobiles, set up decentralised photo voltaic programs, introduce vitality effectivity and generate warmth by photo voltaic thermal vitality.
The inexperienced hydrogen technique authorized in 2023 consists of eight targets and 30 strains of motion, foreseeing the annual manufacturing of 500,000 tonnes of this vitality and derivatives, to cowl 5% of the transport gas provide by 2030.
In 20 years, the estimate rises to the provision of 40% of transport fuels.
However this potential would require 67 gigawatts (Gw) of put in renewable capability, which is a considerable deployment in a rustic whose financial system is extremely depending on the exercise of the inter-oceanic canal between the Pacific and the Atlantic, inaugurated in 1914 and expanded a century later, in a venture that doubled its capability and got here into operation in 2016.
In 2023, the Panamanian vitality combine relied on hydropower, gasoline, wind, bunker, photo voltaic and diesel, with an put in capability of three.47 Gw at first of 2024. Panama at the moment has a minimum of 31 photovoltaic crops and three wind farms.
Electrical energy era accounted for some 24 million tonnes of CO2 emissions in 2021, with the biggest contributors being vitality (70%) and agriculture (20%).
However in 2023, the nation declared itself carbon impartial, i.e. its forests seize the air pollution launched into the environment, having a destructive steadiness in GHG emissions.
The nationwide technique consists of the development of a 160 megawatt (MW) photo voltaic plant and an 18 MW wind energy farm within the centre-south of the nation, in addition to a second 290 MW photovoltaic plant within the northern province of Colón.
On this province, a inexperienced ammonia manufacturing plant is deliberate to provide the long run demand for transport gas, with an annual manufacturing of 65,000 tonnes and an funding of US$ 500 million.
The worldwide transport sector considers hydrogen, ammonia and its spinoff, methanol, to be viable. The latter, which can be used to make fertilisers, explosives and different commodities, could be obtained from inexperienced hydrogen.
A requirement of as much as 280,000 tonnes of inexperienced ammonia per yr is projected by 2040, which might require the set up of 4.2 Gw of electrolysis.
Leonardo Beltrán, a non-resident researcher on the non-governmental Institute of the Americas, advised IPS in regards to the technique of constructing methods, institutional imaginative and prescient, and quick, medium and long-term targets.
“They’ve taken large steps in a comparatively quick time period. They have already got the infrastructure, the canal. If that demand is met, it could possibly be a recreation changer. When you can join the canal to different ports, to america or Europe, they might very properly have that (inexperienced) hall that may anchor a related demand. That may increase on-site and likewise regional era,” he mentioned from Mexico Metropolis.
With help from the Inter-American Growth Financial institution (IDB) and the United Nations Atmosphere Programme (UNEP), Panama is creating pre-feasibility initiatives on the manufacturing of inexperienced hydrogen, its conversion to ammonia and the set up of an ammonia dispatch station as a clear transport gas, and on the manufacturing of inexperienced aviation paraffin.
The roadmap discovered to be extra possible the manufacturing of hydrogen in Panama, the import of inexperienced ammonia and the processing of inexperienced transport gas.

Additionally, the nation is contemplating manufacturing inexperienced paraffin for aviation, provided that it hosts an air transport hub within the area, though testing is in its infancy and includes a for much longer course of than within the case of transport.
Harmonisation
The hydrogen technique is a operate of Panama’s logistical, vitality and local weather change wants.
Panama at the moment has 10 tax-free fossil gas areas, with storage capability of greater than 30 million barrels (159 litre) equal and one liquefied fossil gasoline space, that are tax exempt and could possibly be the mannequin for future hydrogen era areas.
In 2021, the nation shipped 42.79 million tonnes of gas to greater than 44,000 vessels, a determine that may develop by 2030. By comparability, hydrogen passing by the canal would whole 81.84 million tonnes in 2030 and 190.96 million in 2050.
In its voluntary local weather contributions below the Paris Settlement, Panama pledged to scale back whole emissions from the vitality sector by a minimum of 11.5% in 2030, from its 2019 stage, and by 24% in 2050.
In parallel, as of 2021, the Panama Canal, by which 6% of world commerce passes, is implementing its personal Sustainable Growth and Decarbonisation Technique.
The autonomous Panama Canal Authority’s plan consists of the introduction of electrical automobiles, tugboats and boats utilizing various fuels; the alternative of fossil electrical energy with photovoltaics and the usage of hydropower, to turn out to be carbon impartial by 2030, with an funding of some US$8.5 billion over the subsequent 5 years.
The canal reduces some 16 million tonnes of CO2 annually.
Tolls and transport providers are its greatest sources of income, and thus the significance of creating transport fuels based mostly on clear hydrogen.
Within the first 9 months of 2023, 210.73 million lengthy tons (1,016 kilograms) went by the interoceanic infrastructure, down from 218.44 million in the identical interval in 2022.
Of the whole cargoes, one third are fossil fuels. Container, chemical, gasoline and bulk carriers are the primary transports.
Lucero mentioned the nation is searching for investments in renewable vitality, significantly inexperienced hydrogen.
“This market must be developed in an orderly approach. Demand must be pushed; in any other case, the funding won’t be worthwhile. There are uncertainties, however the line that has been taken is that hydrogen is the long run and we wish to break free from being followers to turn out to be leaders, to grab the second to develop and be ready when the growth arrives,” he careworn.
For knowledgeable Beltrán, if the federal government that took workplace on 1 July follows this route, it might ship a robust sign to the sector and thus pull the transport sector towards vitality transition.
“Changing imports with native product is extra handy, and the way in which can be with the out there, renewable useful resource. That may influence native improvement and contribute to the vitality transition agenda,” he mentioned.
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