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Can solar fuels ever be viable?

The idea of producing fuels from air, water and the sun has great appeal and the chemistry and technology to do so exists. Electrolysis (using renewable electricity) of water to make hydrogen and air capture of CO2 are both done today, albeit on a relatively small scale (compared to other ways of making hydrogen) in the case of hydrogen and very small scale in the case of air capture. Hydrogen and carbon dioxide can then be combined in different ways to produce fuels.

As an end to end process the above doesn’t exist, other than at pilot plant scale. All the technologies have been proven, but building a facility that at least matches the scale of the Shell Gas-to-Liquids synthesis plant in Qatar is likely many years away. For example, the largest air capture facility in the world announced so far is a 500,000 tons per year facility due to start up in 2023. This is the equivalent of 136,000 tons of carbon or some 160,000 tons of Jet A-1, but the facility in Qatar produces ~8 million tonnes per year.

The reason for wanting to synthesize hydrocarbons from air and water is threefold;

We might also imagine building a very large scale synthetic hydrocarbon industry to meet all sorts of requirements, thereby taking the pressure away from the need to find solutions for all the current uses of fossil fuels, so effectively lowering the bar of difficulty from just aviation to many other sectors and uses. But to do this, the manufacture of synthetic hydrocarbons needs to be competitive with alternatives, even allowing for policy instruments such as robust carbon pricing.

A recent paper on synthetic fuels tackles the cost issue head on and looks at what we need to believe for so-called ‘solar fuels’ to become a reality. The paper focuses on the five principal elements required to manufacture solar fuels; solar PV, electrolysis to produce hydrogen, direct air capture of CO2, hydrogen activation of CO2 to CO and Fischer-Tropsch synthesis. Based on current costs of this array of technologies, the end-to-end cost of product from this process approaches $900 per barrel, or around $5 per litre. Much of this cost sits with the newer technologies, namely solar PV, hydrogen electrolysis and direct air capture. But these are also the areas where sharp cost reductions are either being seen or are anticipated.

In addition, significant relative cost reductions (i.e. 50-70% cost improvement) are also required in already mature technologies, such as Fischer-Tropsch synthesis.

The five technologies required are also at very different stages in their respective development. For example, although electrolysis remains quite expensive, it is far ahead in terms of commercial deployment when compared to Direct Air Capture. The latter is still in the early pilot phases of development, but is nevertheless making progress.

With all these factors aligning and imagining a policy regime which injected a carbon price into the mix (to bridge the final gap), it is just feasible to see synthetic fuels becoming an option. However, commercial considerations will doubtless prevail. For example, if direct air capture costs fall dramatically, it could well make more sense to continue using legacy infrastructure (refining crude oil) to make Jet A-1 and then capturing and storing carbon dioxide to balance the emissions. Such a route forward would also be one that supplied numerous other products where alternatives remain elusive.

 

 

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