Barclay Pearce Capital
- Jul 4, 2024
- 4 min read
LINE Hydrogen's Role in Diesel Replacement - Corporate Showcase Episode 18
Follow Barclay Pearce Capital and LINE Hydrogen as they discuss LINE Hydrogen's role in Diesel Replacement. Watch the interactions between; Jack Colreavy, the Senior Associate of Corporate Finance from Barclay Pearce Capital, and, Brendan James, the Founder and Executive Chairman of LINE Hydrogen.
Read the Conversation:
In the studio today, we have Brendan James, the founder, chairman and chief scientist of Green Hydrogen producer LINE Hydrogen. Today, I'd like to discuss with you the offtake. So Green Hydrogen has been described as a Swiss army knife of energy due to its many uses, but LINE Hydrogen's targeting a particular area.
Can you talk about diesel replacement and why that's a great place for your hydrogen to be used? Thanks, Jack. Happy to do so. Diesel is Australia's delivered fuel. And look, that's really why we started as a business. We haven't lost sight of that. We originally started LINE Hydrogen as an energy source to replace diesel, particularly in, in regional and remote applications in those areas of heavy transport and power generation.
Once you get outside of Australia's major cities, diesel is the only delivered fuel that is capable of both producing power in heavy industry Transcribed and also for the heavy transport network. So it's always been our focus. It'll continue to be our focus going forward, but there's also a strong business case as to why that should be.
Diesel right now is the highest priced energy per megajoule of energy produced. So by targeting diesel and diesel first, it allows us to really get that efficiency of scale that we require. It allows us to build up at a very good margin, obviously on return on that hydrogen production, which allows us to expand that operation.
Once we expand that operation, we can then start looking at, at providing hydrogen into the other, uh, lower cost energy systems, such as gas replacement and pipelines. But right now, uh, the lowest hanging fruit is obviously, uh, diesel. It is the highest cost per energy and obviously provides for us the highest returns.
On the capital investment we put out for shareholders. So the economics stack up. What about looking at it from an ESG lens? What's the environmental impact of diesel? And what sort of carbon emissions could LINE hydrogen offset? So the government obviously has set some fairly strong ESG targets and carbon emission targets going forward.
You can't achieve that in Australia if you don't focus on the transport network. Transport currently makes up some 20 percent of the CO2 emissions that we put out in Australia. And then of course, on top of that, and one of the projects we're looking at is the mining industry and diesel replacement in both mining and heavy industry for both power generation and in pit transportation.
In that, diesel obviously produces around about 2. 7 kilos of CO2 emissions per litre consumed. When you look at a VW truck that's running on the highway, it's consuming around about 65 litres of diesel per 100 kilometres that the truck travels. So, one of the reasons to focus on heavy transport, in particular VW and larger size applications, while required as part of our society, they are currently one of the biggest emitters, uh, that, that we have on the road.
So by applying hydrogen to replace diesel in a truck has a significant effect on, on emissions in Australia. So profit with purpose. That's what we love to hear. What's the technology behind it. How is hydrogen used to, to power a vehicle? Well, hydrogen is actually a really interesting fuel. It can be used in a, in a number of ways to power vehicles.
One, and probably the most common, uh, been applied to date when you look at the Toyota Mirai, uh, hydrogen. And you look at the Toyota truck that was running in LA. It's normally been the fuel cell application and the fuel cell application is, is using hydrogen to mix the hydrogen with air through a fuel cell to produce electricity and run a full electric drive train.
It's a very low cost application. So it allows companies to convert away from diesel consumption, producing just water from their heavy vehicles that they're running or power generations. At a very low capital cost. And, uh, and that's very important for business in Australia. If we want this to roll out, if we want hydrogen to take hold, and we want companies to actually start convert, away from CO2 emissions, then we need to provide a low capital option.
So, um, speaking of the rollout, when do you envision LINE Hydrogen Trucks to be on the road? LINE Hydrogen Trucks will be on the road at the start of our operations in Georgetown, in Tasmania. So our partners that we're working with will, uh, will be running the first hydrogen trucks at a VW application, and they will be running start up.
And obviously, start up, uh, later this year. At Georgetown will be Australia's first commercial scale green hydrogen operation, producing some 1600 kilos of hydrogen per day. Now, to put that into layman's terms, that's enough hydrogen to run a car, uh, a hydrogen powered car around the world four times every day.
Or enough, uh, hydrogen to, uh, to run around about 3, 900 cars. That's so exciting to hear that this hydrogen revolution is starting this year and, and that LINE's at the forefront of it all. Thank you so much for your time, Brendan. It was great to talk to you. To learn more about LINE Hydrogen and the relevant investment opportunities, please click the link in the description or contact BPC.
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