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"Global Green Hydrogen CapEx Struggles Amid Sector Delays and Policy Uncertainties"

"Global Green Hydrogen CapEx Struggles Amid Sector Delays and Policy Uncertainties"

Global Green Hydrogen CapEx and Project Pipeline Analysis Amid Sector Delays and 2030 Revisions

Over the past 72 hours, recent OSINT indicates a significant disparity between announced green hydrogen project pipelines and those progressing toward final investment decisions (FID), highlighting ongoing delays and revisions in infrastructure planning. The data also reveals substantial CapEx commitments against a backdrop of sector-specific policy and infrastructure readiness challenges.

The global announced hydrogen project pipeline totals approximately 1,450 projects with potential capacity exceeding 45 Mt H2/year by 2030, according to the Hydrogen Council and McKinsey. However, only an estimated 35–40 Mt H2eq supply in advanced stages (post-FEED or under construction) is expected to be realistically bankable before 2030, with a reduction to 15–20 Mt H2eq when considering offtake, policy, and infrastructure factors.

Global clean hydrogen CapEx through 2030 is projected to require over US$570–600 billion, yet only about 15–20% of this amount has secured FID, indicating a large investment gap between announced ambitions and committed capital, as reported by the Hydrogen Council and McKinsey.

European demand for renewable fuels of non-biological origin (RFNBO) is set to increase, with 42% of hydrogen in refineries and 60% for ammonia expected to be RFNBO by 2030 under FuelEU and RED III regulations, potentially de-risking parts of the European green hydrogen CapEx pipeline if implementation proceeds without delays, per European Commission Q&A.

Germany’s H2Global 2.0 tender supports up to €4–5 billion for 10-year offtake contracts, aiming to move multiple export projects of 200–500 MW capacity toward FID in 2026, according to the German Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs & Climate. Meanwhile, India’s Green Hydrogen Mission confirms initial PLI awards of 3–4 GW electrolyser capacity, with subsequent incentives planned for early 2026, reflecting a slower award pace but continued CapEx commitments, as per the Indian Ministry of New and Renewable Energy.

The Saudi NEOM green hydrogen project maintains a budget around US$8.5–9 billion, with mechanical completion targeted for 2027 and a capacity of 4 GW renewables plus 2 GW electrolysis, indicating at least one flagship project remains on scope amid broader sector delays, according to Air Products investor updates.

The dataset does not specify detailed project margin levels or the precise timing of FID for all projects, and liquidity breakdowns for CapEx investments are not included. Sector-specific delays and policy implementation uncertainties are ongoing factors in project progression.

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