Hydrogen Council

The World Hydrogen Council is a global CEO-led initiative of 132 leading energy, transport, industry, and investment companies that seeks to develop the hydrogen economy. It claims to accelerate investment in the development and commercialization of the hydrogen and fuel cell sectors and encourage stakeholders to increase their backing of hydrogen as part of the future energy mix.

Formation
The Hydrogen Council launched at the World Economic Forum in Davos on January 7, 2017. In one of two formal statements made at the Forum, Air Liquide Chairman and CEO Benoît Potier stated that the aim of the initiative is “to explain why hydrogen emerges among the key solutions for the energy transition, in mobility as well as in the power, industrial and residential sectors.”

The 13 inaugural members included Air Liquide, Alstom, Anglo American plc, BMW, Daimler AG, ENGIE, Honda, Hyundai Motor Company, Kawasaki Heavy Industries, Royal Dutch Shell, The Linde Group, Total S.A., and Toyota Motor Corporation.

Members
, the Hydrogen Council consists of 132 members separated into three groups: the Steering Group, the Supporting Group, and the Investor Group.

Steering Group (52 members)

 * Abu Dhabi National Oil Company
 * The Anschutz Corporation
 * Airbus
 * Air Liquide
 * Air Products
 * Alstom
 * Anglo American
 * Audi AG
 * BMW GROUP
 * BP
 * Bosch
 * CF Industries
 * Chemours
 * China Energy
 * CMA CGM
 * CNH Industrial (via IVECO)
 * Cummins
 * Daimler
 * EDF
 * ENEOS Corporation
 * ENGIE
 * Equinor
 * Faurecia
 * General Motors
 * Great Wall Motor
 * Honda
 * Honeywell
 * Hyundai Motor
 * Iwatani
 * Johnson Matthey
 * Kawasaki
 * KOGAS
 * Linde
 * Michelin
 * Microsoft
 * MSC Group
 * OCI NV
 * Plastic Omnium
 * Saudi Aramco (via the Aramco Overseas Company)
 * Schaeffler Group
 * Shell
 * SABIC
 * Sasol
 * Solvay
 * Siemens Energy
 * Sinopec
 * thyssenkrupp
 * Total Energies
 * Toyota
 * Uniper
 * Weichai
 * Wood

Supporting Group (68 members)

 * 3M
 * ACME
 * AFC Energy
 * AVL
 * Baker Hughes
 * Ballard Power Systems
 * Black & Veatch
 * Bureau Veritas
 * cellcentric
 * Chart Industries
 * Chevron
 * Clariant
 * Cryogenmash
 * Delek US Holdings
 * Eberspächer
 * ElringKlinger
 * Enbridge Gas
 * Faber Cylinders
 * First Element Fuel (True Zero)
 * Fortescue Metals Group
 * Fuel Cell Energy
 * Galp
 * W. L. Gore
 * Haldor Topsoe
 * Hexagon Composites
 * Howden
 * ILJIN Hysolus
 * Indian Oil Corporation
 * ITOCHU Corporation
 * John Cockerill
 * Komatsu
 * Liebherr
 * MAHLE
 * MAN Energy Solutions
 * MANN+HUMMEL
 * Marubeni
 * Matrix Service Company
 * McDermott
 * McPhy
 * Mitsubishi Corporation
 * Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Ltd.
 * Mitsui & Co
 * Nel Hydrogen
 * NGK Spark Plug Co.
 * Nikola Motor
 * NYK Line
 * Parker Hannifin Corporation
 * PETRONAS
 * Plug Power
 * Port of Rotterdam
 * Power Assets Holdings
 * Re-Fire Technology
 * Reliance Industries Limited
 * Sinocat
 * SinoHytec
 * Sinoma Science & Technology
 * Snam
 * Southern California Gas
 * Southern Company
 * Subsea 7
 * Sumitomo Corporation
 * Technip Energies
 * Tokyo Gas
 * Toyota Tsusho
 * TÜV SÜD
 * Umicore
 * Westport Fuel System
 * Woodside Energy

Investor Group (12 members)

 * Antin Infrastructure Partners
 * Barclays
 * BNP Paribas
 * Crédit Agricole
 * FiveT Hydrogen
 * GIC
 * Mubadala Investment Company
 * Natixis
 * Providence Asset Group
 * Société Générale
 * Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group (SMFG)
 * Temasek

Governance
The Hydrogen Council is steered by a core group of executives who meet annually at a CEO-level event. Ongoing governance is led by two Co-Chairs from different geographies and sectors, elected every two years by the council's Steering Members. Each year, one of the two co-chair mandates is renewed for continuity. The organization is steered by two co-secretaries (representatives of the two Co-Chairs).

Co-Chairs and Co-Secretaries
To date, the co-chair and Co-Secretary positions have been held by Air Liquide and Toyota (2017), Air Liquide, Hyundai (2018), and Air Liquide and Hyundai (2019).

Partners
As of November 2019, The Hydrogen Council lists its partners as The Center for Hydrogen Safety (CHS), The Clean Energy Ministerial (CEM), Energy Observer, View, IEA Hydrogen, Mission Innovation (MI), and The World Economic Forum.

Reports
The Hydrogen Council has published three reports, in collaboration with McKinsey & Company, that are available on their website.

How Hydrogen Empowers the Energy Transition
Published in January 2017, "How Hydrogen Empowers the Energy Transition" explores the seven roles of hydrogen in decarbonizing significant sectors of the economy and considers the policy environment needed to facilitate the deployment of hydrogen technology.

Hydrogen Scaling Up: A Sustainable Pathway for the Global Energy Transition
Published in November 2017, "Hydrogen, scaling up" suggests wide-scale deployment of hydrogen for the decarbonization of transport, industry, and buildings and enabling a renewable energy production and distribution system. The scenarios outlined in the report suggest that hydrogen technologies could contribute to meeting 18% of the world's final energy demands, avoiding 6 Gt of emissions, and creating a market with revenues of $2.5 trillion each year while providing 30 million jobs by mid-century. An investment of $280 billion – or annual investments of $20–25 billion until 2030 – would be required to build the hydrogen economy with these benefits.

Following the publication of this report, the EU, France, and South Korea published similar analyses, focusing on their specific regions.

Hydrogen Meets Digital
Published in September 2018, "Hydrogen Meets Digital" investigates the impact of digitization on energy demand to establish a dialogue with the ICT sector on how digitization and hydrogen could complement each other during the energy transition. The report concludes that hydrogen has substantial benefits that could enable major digital trends and thus serve as an efficient, zero-emission energy vector.

Path to Hydrogen Competitiveness: A Cost Perspective
Published in January 2020, "Path to Hydrogen Competitiveness: A Cost Perspective" provides evidence based on the path to cost competitiveness for 40 hydrogen technologies used in 35 applications. The report suggests that scale-up will be the biggest driver of cost reduction, with costs projected to decrease by up to 50% by 2030 for a wide range of applications.

CEO Events
The Hydrogen Council holds an annual CEO Event, where CEOs and C-suite representatives of member organizations meet to reflect on the work of the previous year and to brainstorm strategies to accelerate the council's mission going forward. To date, five CEO Events have taken place. The first was held at the World Economic Forum in Davos (2017), the second at the COP 23 in Bonn, Germany (2017), the third in San Francisco, USA (2018)., the fourth in Versailles in January 2020 and the last in a digital format in January 2021.

Side Events
The Hydrogen Council also hosted a number of side events that gathered CEOs and executives from member organizations alongside key stakeholders and influencers in the energy sector. Examples of such events include: 'New York: Investor Day, Celebrating Hydrogen in the Clean Energy Economy', 'China: Hydrogen Industry Development Innovation Forum', and 'Korea: International Hydrogen Energy Forum.'