There is a general race to decarbonize industries globally, and renewable hydrogen is developing into a key pathway toward cleaner energy. The beginnings of what will make a better initiative, the Transatlantic Clean Hydrogen Trade Coalition, are to form around this very issue of enabling clean hydrogen to ship from the US to Europe. H2TC has all these ambitious goals and the collaboration of giants in the industry, thus making an indelible mark on the energy landscape.
H2TC plans to launch transatlantic hydrogen deliveries by 2026
By means of such mighty efforts, H2TC slices transatlantic hydrogen delivery for the year 2026. The aim is to establish a coalition that annually transports out of its territory more than three million metric tons of low-carbon hydrogen by 2030.
This sum should contribute around 30% of the total EU import target of 10 million metric tons per year as the ships get rolling. The milestone is accomplished through institutions like the Mission Possible Partnership (MPP), RMI, Systeminq, etc. all bunched in cooperation with such important ports as Corpus Christi and Rotterdam.
The coalition believes that hydrogen derivatives like ammonia and methanol are the most feasible carriers wherein existing infrastructure in the US Gulf Coast can play its role.In fact, ammonia provides the best energy density and cost-effective amounts for shipping, as per Nabil Bennouna, principal at Climate Aligned Industries. Its prevailing network of pipelines, salt dome storage, and low-cost renewable energy only bolsters the north spring position as a launchpad for this ambitious project.
More than 20 industry leaders unite for supporting the vision of H2TC
From technological to regulatory, H2TC has big challenges ahead which will determine its success or failure. It has already caught the attention of over 20 private sector partners, including Shell, Linde, and Ambient Fuels, for them to provide their expertise throughout the hydrogen supply chain.
According to Keith Patch, one of the immediate priority areas is identifying the best economical and scalable transatlantic method for hydrogen transportation. Currently, ammonia seems like the most likely candidate in this contest, but with all such things he points out, we must consider chemical and energy losses during conversion and transportation.
At the same time, meanwhile, other players like Air Liquide and NEOM are progressing quite well with ammonia cracking technologies, affirming the versatility of this hydrogen carrier. Collaboration is beyond industry to policymakers as well.
H2TC seeks to align trade laws in the US and EU standardize market practices and secure offtake agreements. They are addressing those bottlenecks through collective efforts, creating a strong framework for hydrogen trade that works for both continents (just like this one which is 10 million metric tonnes and a new color).
Biden’s inflation reduction fosters growth for low-carbon hydrogen
It is much more in the coalition regarding hydrogen than just shipping hydrogen; it is about scaling up the entire hydrogen ecosystem. The Biden Administration’s Inflation Reduction Act subsidizes the production tax credit for low-carbon hydrogen at upward of $3 per kilogram, which the industries in Europe-from fertilizers to steel-now will be aching access to cheap, clean hydrogen to fast-track their decarbonization efforts.
Bryan Fisher, managing director of RMI, emphasized, The Coalition brings energy security and helps the energy transition on both sides of the Atlantic. Jeff Pollack from the Port of Corpus Christi agrees with this and even mentions making good use of what is already at stake.
Existing infrastructure will serve to cut the overhead and costs of the hydrogen supply chain. The Transatlantic Clean Hydrogen Trade Coalition (H2TC) is a pathfinder for global energy transformation by linking US producers with European consumers for a sustainable future.
H2TC is a model of collaborative action in bringing renewable hydrogen to market and transforming energy systems (such as this one which is the world’s largest corridor), starting with its first shipment expected by 2026 and aggressive goals for 2030.












