The Hydrogen Economy #55
Europe: High Costs and Too Much Focus
Key Points
- The Europeans risk bankrupting themselves if they keep pushing ahead with largely uneconomic hydrogen projects, almost all showing no promise of achieving the economics required to survive.
- As the subsidy and price pass-through ask rises, we do not expect local governments to react by spending even more public money; instead, we expect an easing of rules to allow a role for less perfect but lower-cost options.
- The Shell renewable fuels backdown may have some project cost basis, but the larger driver is likely customer reluctance to pay up for much more expensive products – despite subsidies – this could change for SAF.
- We evaluate why China can accelerate electrolyzer development, while European and US makers may get orders and capacity reservations but not much action. Orders for Europe may stall if Shell is a precedent.
- Otherwise, we review only a handful of projects – Germany, the UK, and Australia, with only Australia looking plausible, we note the pressure on grey ammonia prices and recap our weekend work on data center power.
Exhibit 1: This is an analysis of cash costs and does not include capital costs of hydrogen or new power sources.

Source: Bloomberg, Corporate Reports and C-MACC Analysis
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