as the gas industry says the state is squandering an opportunity to boost the use of renewable forms of the power source, including a hydrogen blend, through its upgraded network.
Group chief executive Craig de Laine said it did not make sense to ban new gas connections to homes when zero-emissions hydrogen generated using renewable energy could be introduced at little extra cost to taxpayers. Australian Gas Infrastructure Group chief executive Craig de Laine says Melbourne’s domestic gas network can handle renewable hydrogen.
The industry is arguing that hydrogen can be delivered over the same network as natural gas. It says hydrogen, which can be separated from water using electricity, is already being used to make “blended gas”, which is 10 to 20 per cent less emissions-intensive and does not require households to switch or upgrade existing appliances.
Modelling undertaken as part of the government’s Gas Substitution Roadmap also suggests that hydrogen production for use in homes would not be an economically viable alternative to heat pumps and induction stoves. The group says the plant, which is located on the Hume Highway, will also be well positioned to supply any future renewable hydrogen refuelling network along Australia’s most significant transport route.
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