Aim
This program explains how green hydrogen can help decarbonize hard-to-abate industrial sectors and support net-zero targets. Participants will learn the full value chain—renewable power to electrolysis, storage and transport, industrial use-cases (steel, ammonia, refining, chemicals, and high-temperature heat), and how to evaluate emissions impact, project feasibility, safety, and implementation pathways.
Program Objectives
- Understand why hydrogen matters for net-zero industry and where electrification alone is not enough.
- Learn how green hydrogen is produced and what drives efficiency, cost, and scalability.
- Explore industrial applications: feedstock replacement, process heat, and energy storage integration.
- Evaluate emissions impact using practical lifecycle and carbon accounting concepts.
- Understand infrastructure needs: storage, transport, blending, and on-site systems.
- Build project-readiness skills: safety, risk, economics, and implementation planning.
Program Structure (Humanized)
Module 1: Net-Zero Industry — Where the Emissions Really Come From
- We start by mapping industrial emissions: fuel burning, process emissions, and supply-chain impacts.
- Why “hard-to-abate” sectors exist (steel, cement, chemicals, refining) and what makes them difficult.
- Where green hydrogen is genuinely useful vs where it’s not the best option.
Module 2: Hydrogen Basics (Quick, Clear, and Practical)
- Hydrogen as an energy carrier vs feedstock—what changes in each case.
- Key terms: LHV/HHV, purity, pressure, safety basics, and common standards language (overview).
- Color codes explained: green vs blue vs grey (focus on green pathways).
Module 3: Making Green Hydrogen — Electrolysis + Renewables
- How electrolysis works and what controls output and efficiency.
- Electrolyzer types (ALK, PEM, SOEC) and when each is preferred (selection logic).
- Renewable integration: variability, curtailment, and why capacity factor matters.
Module 4: The Real Engineering Constraints (Water, Power, Heat, and Operations)
- Water needs, purification, and site considerations (practical view).
- Power electronics, ramping behavior, and operating windows.
- Reliability and maintenance: what causes downtime and performance drift.
Module 5: Storage and Transport — Getting Hydrogen Where It’s Needed
- Storage options: compressed gas, liquid hydrogen (conceptual), and solid/chemical carriers (overview).
- Transport pathways: pipelines, trucking, on-site production vs centralized hubs.
- Blending with natural gas: what it can do and what it cannot solve.
Module 6: Industrial Use-Cases That Drive Net-Zero Impact
- Ammonia and fertilizers: replacing fossil-based hydrogen feedstock.
- Refining and chemicals: hydrogen demand centers and decarbonization pathways.
- Steel: direct reduced iron (DRI) concepts and hydrogen’s role (high-level).
- High-temperature heat: burners, furnaces, and hybrid strategies with electrification.
Module 7: Measuring Carbon Impact (Beyond Marketing Claims)
- Lifecycle thinking: where emissions hide (electricity source, water treatment, transport, losses).
- Practical carbon accounting basics: baseline vs project scenario comparisons.
- Understanding “additionality” and why clean electricity sourcing matters (overview).
Module 8: Economics and Feasibility (What Makes Projects Work)
- Main cost drivers: electricity price, electrolyzer capex, utilization, and O&M.
- Levelized cost thinking (conceptual), sensitivity to power price and capacity factor.
- Industrial decision lens: reliability, integration cost, and payback logic.
Module 9: Safety, Risk, and Operational Readiness
- Hydrogen safety fundamentals: leaks, ventilation, ignition sources, and detection.
- Materials and compatibility: embrittlement awareness and component selection (overview).
- Basic hazard analysis mindset and safe plant-layout thinking.
Module 10: Implementation Pathways and Roadmaps
- On-site vs off-site production decisions and phased deployment strategies.
- Building a roadmap: pilots → scaling → full integration.
- How to communicate projects to stakeholders: technical case + carbon case + risk case.
Final Project (Industry-Style Case Study)
- Choose an industrial sector (ammonia/refining/steel/heat) and design a green hydrogen integration concept.
- Define: demand profile, production method, storage/transport plan, and carbon reduction estimate.
- Create a feasibility snapshot: key assumptions, risks, safety notes, and implementation phases.
- Example projects: green H₂ for refinery hydrogen unit replacement, ammonia plant green feedstock plan, hydrogen-assisted industrial furnace decarbonization roadmap.
Participant Eligibility
- Engineering and science students (Chemical, Mechanical, Electrical, Energy, Environmental).
- Industry professionals from manufacturing, chemicals, refining, steel, and sustainability teams.
- Researchers and analysts working on net-zero, clean energy, and industrial decarbonization.
Program Outcomes
- Clear understanding of where green hydrogen fits in net-zero industrial strategies.
- Ability to explain the hydrogen value chain: production, storage/transport, and end-use integration.
- Practical skills to evaluate emissions impact using lifecycle-aware thinking.
- Basic feasibility capability: economics drivers, operational constraints, and deployment planning.
- Safety and risk awareness for industrial hydrogen implementation.
Program Deliverables
- Access to e-LMS: Full access to learning resources, case studies, and templates.
- Assignments: Sector mapping worksheets, value-chain diagrams, and carbon-impact estimation exercises.
- Project Guidance: Mentor support for your final case study and roadmap design.
- Final Examination: Certification awarded after successful completion of exam and assignments.
- e-Certification and e-Marksheet: Digital credentials provided upon successful completion.
Future Career Prospects
- Hydrogen & Industrial Decarbonization Analyst
- Clean Energy Project Associate (Green Hydrogen)
- Industrial Sustainability & Net-Zero Consultant
- Process Engineer (Low-Carbon Systems)
- Energy Systems & Transition Strategy Specialist
Job Opportunities
- Industrial Companies: net-zero transition, energy management, and process optimization teams.
- Clean Energy Developers: green hydrogen production, storage, and infrastructure projects.
- Engineering & EPC Firms: design and integration roles for hydrogen-ready industrial systems.
- Research Institutions & Think Tanks: industrial decarbonization and energy transition studies.
- Consulting & Sustainability Firms: feasibility assessments and roadmap development.






Reviews
There are no reviews yet.