Articles | Volume 23, issue 10
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-23-6011-2023
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-23-6011-2023
Peer-reviewed comment
 | 
01 Jun 2023
Peer-reviewed comment |  | 01 Jun 2023

Comment on “Climate consequences of hydrogen emissions” by Ocko and Hamburg (2022)

Lei Duan and Ken Caldeira

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Cited articles

Allen, M. R., Frame, D. J., Huntingford, C., Jones, C. D., Lowe, J. A., Meinshausen, M., and Meinshausen, N.: Warming caused by cumulative carbon emissions towards the trillionth tonne, Nature, 458, 1163–1166, 2009. 
Allen, M. R., Fuglestvedt, J. S., Shine, K. P., Reisinger, A., Pierrehumbert, R. T., and Forster, P. M.: New use of global warming potentials to compare cumulative and short-lived climate pollutants, Nat. Clim. Change, 6, 773–776, 2016. 
Archer, D.: Fate of fossil fuel CO2 in geologic time, J. Geophys. Res.-Oceans, 110, C09S05, https://doi.org/10.1029/2004JC002625, 2005. 
Balcombe, P., Speirs, J. F., Brandon, N. P., and Hawkes, A. D.: Methane emissions: choosing the right climate metric and time horizon, Environ. Sci. Process. Impacts, 20, 1323–1339, 2018. 
Boucher, O., Friedlingstein, P., Collins, B., and Shine, K. P.: The indirect global warming potential and global temperature change potential due to methane oxidation, Environ. Res. Lett., 4, 044007, https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/4/4/044007, 2009. 
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Short summary
Ocko and Hamburg (2022) emphasize the short-term climate impact of hydrogen, and we present an analysis that places greater focus on long-term outcomes. We have derived equations that describe the time-evolving impact of hydrogen and show that higher methane leakage is primarily responsible for the warming potential of blue hydrogen, while hydrogen leakage plays a less critical role. Fossil fuels show more prominent longer-term climate impacts than clean hydrogen under all emission scenarios.
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