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Chamber

Meeting of the Parliament 01 May 2025

01 May 2025 · S6 · Meeting of the Parliament
Item of business
Scotland’s Hydrogen Future
Martin, Gillian SNP Aberdeenshire East Watch on SPTV

Colleagues, today’s debate on Scotland’s hydrogen future is important, and I am pleased to open it. Hydrogen stands as a critical pillar of Scotland’s route to net zero by 2045. Alongside the development of offshore wind capacity, it is one of Scotland’s greatest industrial opportunities since the discovery of oil and gas in the North Sea. I will set out some of the progress that we have made to further develop the sector, the challenges that we still face and need to overcome, and why collaboration across Governments, sectors and borders will continue to be absolutely essential if we are to realise our hydrogen ambitions for Scotland and those for the whole of the United Kingdom.

As I have said many times, Scotland is committed to the target of reaching net zero by 2045. That ambitious target reflects our determination not only to lead by example in the UK and Europe in our response to the climate emergency, but, critically, to harness the vast economic opportunities that an energy transition presents for Scotland. The global shocks that we have experienced since 2022—geopolitical instability, energy market disruption caused by Russia’s illegal invasion of Ukraine and the urgent drive towards energy security in Europe—have only underscored the need to work together in Scotland, across the United Kingdom and with our international partners, particularly in continental Europe, to bolster our energy security.

A just transition remains at the heart of our approach. We are determined that no community—particularly not the ones that have powered our economy for generations—will be left behind as we move away from the burning of fossil fuels towards a low-carbon energy system. We are working to build a hydrogen economy in which the benefits of our energy transition are shared and that harnesses the full potential of our skilled workforce and world-class industries, both of which are the envy of neighbouring countries, as well as the natural resources that Scotland is so lucky to have.

Our hydrogen action plan offers a pathway to decarbonising hard-to-abate sectors. It can balance our power system, improve our energy security and, at the same time, secure high-quality jobs in our communities. Our hydrogen action plan and green industrial strategy dovetail to set out clear actions that will establish a thriving hydrogen economy in Scotland. Despite changing global conditions, we are firmly in delivery mode. We are not wavering from that ambition, and we have already made significant progress. We have a growing pipeline of more than 100 hydrogen production projects that are at varying stages of development, the majority of which are green hydrogen production projects. Those projects provide confidence in the future growth of the hydrogen economy in Scotland.

The UK Government’s hydrogen allocation rounds—HARs—are a vital mechanism for supporting low-carbon and renewable hydrogen production across the UK and providing revenue support to bridge the gap between clean hydrogen and fossil fuels. The first hydrogen allocation round—HAR1—delivered funding to two early Scottish projects—Cromarty hydrogen project and Whitelee wind farm—both of which are targeting production in 2026. A further eight Scottish projects, which were shortlisted last month in the HAR2 funding round, provide a significant boost to our progress on production capacity. Six Scottish projects have been boosted by capital funding awards from the UK net zero hydrogen fund.

In addition to the UK Government’s support, the Scottish Government has invested £30 million in the hydrogen sector. That includes £7 million in grants to 31 projects across Scotland via the hydrogen innovation scheme. That has been driving advances in renewable hydrogen production, storage and distribution and the innovation that is associated with that. A £3.1 million grant to Storegga’s Speyside hydrogen project in Moray is developing clean energy to help to decarbonise the whisky industry. I am immensely proud that our iconic whisky industry is one of the first movers in adopting that technology, which I think we will see happening at pace. Via the just transition fund, £6 million is also going to HydroGlen, which is a green farming pilot in Aberdeenshire. Additionally, the H100 project in Fife, a hydrogen for home heating trial that is run by Scotia Gas Networks and is the first of its kind in the world, is soon to commence. It is supported by £6.9 million in Scottish Government funding.

In the same item of business

The Deputy Presiding Officer (Annabelle Ewing) SNP
The next item of business is a debate on motion S6M-17399, in the name of Gillian Martin, on Scotland’s hydrogen future. I invite members who wish to speak i...
The Acting Cabinet Secretary for Net Zero and Energy (Gillian Martin) SNP
Colleagues, today’s debate on Scotland’s hydrogen future is important, and I am pleased to open it. Hydrogen stands as a critical pillar of Scotland’s route ...
Patrick Harvie (Glasgow) (Green) Green
The cabinet secretary began by talking about hydrogen’s role in helping to decarbonise “hard-to-abate” sectors of the economy. Why is she now talking in posi...
Gillian Martin SNP
I think that H100 is a proof of concept. We will have to look at multiple opportunities to decarbonise heating. Some areas in Scotland, such as the western a...
Daniel Johnson (Edinburgh Southern) (Lab) Lab
Patrick Harvie raises an important point, because hydrogen is not an uncontroversial choice. It is not as energy-dense as gas, so there has to be a judgment ...
Gillian Martin SNP
This sort of debate can sometimes be frustrating, because some people are very keen on particular types of technology when there is a myriad of technologies....
Sarah Boyack (Lothian) (Lab) Lab
Will the cabinet secretary take an intervention?
Gillian Martin SNP
Do I have time, Deputy Presiding Officer?
The Deputy Presiding Officer SNP
There is time in hand, cabinet secretary.
Sarah Boyack Lab
I will not make my intervention too long. I very much understand the concept of exporting hydrogen, but we have to build the infrastructure. Professor Jim Sk...
Gillian Martin SNP
The Scottish Government produced its own hydrogen export plan, which looks into exactly that, but it is not something that Scotland could do alone. We need t...
Graham Simpson (Central Scotland) (Con) Con
I welcome this debate because, amid all the hoo-hah about net zero, just transition, affordable transition or whatever we want to call it, if we asked people...
Gillian Martin SNP
I am grateful to Graham Simpson for listing all those projects. Cumulatively, there are quite a lot of projects, and because I took so many interventions, I ...
Graham Simpson Con
I am not here to do the cabinet secretary’s job for her, but I am happy to assist on this occasion. There are promising projects. I am grateful to Green Cat...
Patrick Harvie Green
Will the member take an intervention?
Graham Simpson Con
Is there time in hand, Deputy Presiding Officer?
The Deputy Presiding Officer SNP
There is.
Graham Simpson Con
Jolly good. I will take Mr Harvie’s intervention.
Patrick Harvie Green
The member talked about energy security. In what way does it assist energy security to power home heating with something so massively inefficient as hydrogen...
Graham Simpson Con
I am mystified by the Greens’ approach to hydrogen. It is a fuel that gives off nothing but water; I thought that the Greens would be on board with that. Sur...
Daniel Johnson Lab
As I said before, I think that it is important to pilot this, but hydrogen has about one quarter of the energy density of natural gas. Is it not better to fo...
Graham Simpson Con
I agree with the cabinet secretary that our energy system should be a mix. That is why I am keen to pilot hydrogen—just to see whether it works. I see Mr Joh...
Sarah Boyack (Lothian) (Lab) Lab
We need a constructive debate, because this will affect us right across the country. It is important in terms of our environmental and economic ambitions. It...
Patrick Harvie Green
I am grateful for the opportunity to intervene. I note and welcome the fact that Sarah Boyack is specifically referencing green hydrogen. I was a little conf...
Sarah Boyack Lab
There is a hierarchy in maximising the lowest-carbon opportunities for hydrogen. I know that there is an argument for using blue hydrogen, which I will refle...
Gillian Martin SNP
Will the member give way?
Sarah Boyack Lab
Can I just keep going on this point? The key factor about the situation at Grangemouth is that it is not just about increasing the supply of green hydrogen;...
Patrick Harvie (Glasgow) (Green) Green
I welcome the fact that we have the opportunity to debate this issue. It should not be seen as a simplistic debate, and there certainly should not be a split...
Brian Whittle (South Scotland) (Con) Con
I find myself in the uncomfortable position of agreeing with some of what Patrick Harvie has to say—I am very much an advocate for green hydrogen. Blue hydro...
Patrick Harvie Green
If I understand the argument correctly, that still depends on the development and efficiency of carbon capture and storage, which has yet to be proven and wi...