I understand the infinite supply argument (the sun). The point I am making is that the sun's energy has already been captured (positively in EROEI terms) by photovoltaics in a form that is readily usable (electricity). Therefore, there is no requirement, other than in very particular circumstances, to consume hydrogen as an energy source or, again in very particular circumstances, keep it as an alternative energy store. Electricity is both vastly more convenient as an energy source and vastly easier (not to say less energy wasteful in terms of EROEI) as an energy store.BritDownUnder wrote: ↑04 Jan 2024, 12:58 I don't think you can get a negative EROEI with the formula I am thinking of. I think in terms of EROEI > 1 is when you get more energy back than either the energy input to run your 'energy harvesting equipment' or the energy required to make your 'energy harvesting equipment'. There's a bit of difference between the two.
EROEI < 1 for the former is acceptable if you have an infinite energy source like the sun, or your energy produced is in a better form (i.e. more storable) than the energy input - think of making petrol from sunlight.
EROEI < 1 for the latter (energy harvesting equipment) makes no long term sense.
Hope you all get my line of thinking. There's at least two types of EROEI (and probably a few more like ESOEI for storage equipment like batteries or pump storage) and they will have different consequences for mankind.
You could also be a country like Australia that has little oil reserves of its own and spends a considerable proportion of its exports on importing petroleum (like 25%) but has a lot of solar energy and decides (based on both economic and national security reasons) to use EROEI < 1 energy conversion equipment to turn sunlight into petrol via water and CO2 from the air.
Hydrogen will be needed to produce ammonia for fertilisers and there's no real carbon neutral alternative to that.
As for fertilizers from hydrogen (ammonia), that is indeed a definite use case for hydrogen. But, that is as a specialist commodity, not as a general use energy source. Gas welding would be another example that does, indeed, directly involve the consumption of hydrogen as an energy source. But, that is, arguably, an even more specialist use of the hydrogen. As you can see, these are very specialist use cases.
Name something that is needed on an everyday basis by people that needs energy to run that the large scale capture and storage of hydrogen might be used for that electricity is unable to provide.