4.7 Article

Green hydrogen and sustainable development-A social LCA perspective highlighting social hotspots and geopolitical implications of the future hydrogen economy

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JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION
卷 395, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jclepro.2023.136438

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Green hydrogen; Social life cycle assessment; Sustainable development goals; Techno-economic analysis; Social hotspots; Geopolitical implications

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A social life cycle assessment (S-LCA) was conducted on green hydrogen production through water electrolysis powered by renewable energy in seven countries. The results indicate that South Africa poses the highest risk to social indicators, while other countries can reduce risk by manufacturing key equipment domestically. Compared to conventional hydrogen, green hydrogen performs poorly in various social indicators due to the complexity of the supply chain and outsourcing from countries with poor working conditions.
Developing a global hydrogen economy that contributes to the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and achieves net-zero carbon emissions under the Paris Agreement requires evaluating and recognizing the economic, social, and political realities of green hydrogen production. This study performs a cradle-to-gate social life cycle assessment (S-LCA) of green hydrogen production via water electrolysis powered by renewable electricity from solar photovoltaic and wind farms in seven countries (the US, Chile, South Africa, Saudi Arabia, Oman, Australia, and China) to identify the social hotspots in the entire value chain. The results of S-LCA indicate that green hydrogen production in South Africa poses the highest risk to most of the social indicators, especially child labor, fair salary, unemployment, association and bargaining rights, and gender wage gap. However, in the other countries, the risk to most of the social indicators drastically reduces when key equipment is manufactured in the country itself rather than when it is imported from other countries. Due to the increased complexity of the green hydrogen supply chain resulting from components sourced from various parts of the world, the S-LCA results indicate that compared with conventional hydrogen, green hydrogen performed poorly in various social indicators. The S-LCA results revealed that outsourcing key equipment from developing countries with poor working conditions is a major social hotspot in the sustainable development of these countries. In addition, the SLCA results demonstrate that the hydrogen economy has the potential to be capable of achieving SDGS by developing a domestic green hydrogen supply chain and enhancing working conditions in country-specific sectors. Furthermore, a holistic discussion of socio-geopolitical implications is presented, emphasizing the need to develop standardized international regulations to prevent colonialism in the future hydrogen economy.

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