

Thank you for Subscribing to Energy Business Review Weekly Brief
Hydrogen and its potential role in decarbonising home heating are being explored by the government and are cited in many documents including the Hydrogen Strategy, Energy White Paper, and Heat and Buildings Strategy.
Here at Northern Gas Networks, we are extremely proud to be at the forefront of understanding how hydrogen can best be used to reduce our reliance on natural gas and, in parallel, what we need to do to create an efficient and resilient distribution infrastructure capable of meeting our needs long into the future. The launchpad for our work was the H21 Leeds City Gate report, which first established that conversion to hydrogen was technically possible and economically viable. Since that point, we, along with our partners from the gas distribution and transmission networks, have been focusing on the other elements that would be required to make a successful switch from natural gas. Chief among these is safety, and our teams have been engaged in a wide variety of trials and tests under the H21 banner to prove that hydrogen can be delivered and used as safely as natural gas. A good example of this is the work we carried out at the Health and Safety Executive’s Science Division in Buxton and DNV Group’s research facility at Spadeadam in Cumbria, which has included testing the relative leakage rates of 100 percent hydrogen compared to natural gas and understanding the consequences of leakage on a range of typical distribution network assets. Assets were retrieved from the existing natural gas network and tested under hydrogen conditions, with the work demonstrating that assets that did not leak with methane, also did not leak with hydrogen. Also, for those assets that did leak, the rate at which hydrogen leaked was within the expected and calculated limits. This programme was supplemented by further rigorous testing, involving more than 380 experiments at Spadeadam, to understand how hydrogen behaves if it does leak. The results enabled risk assessments currently used for natural gas to be updated for using hydrogen in gas networks.These are extremely exciting times for the gas distribution sector, as we work collectively to make the case for the different innovations and new ways of working that will be required if we are to meet the government's cha
I agree We use cookies on this website to enhance your user experience. By clicking any link on this page you are giving your consent for us to set cookies. More info