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(6¿ù IEA) The IEA's Global Hydrogen Review 2026 provides an update on hydrogen production and demand worldwide and identifies the latest developments relating to policy, infrastructure, trade, investments and innovation. The report is an output of the Clean Energy Ministerial Hydrogen Initiative and is intended to provide an update to energy sector stakeholders on the status and future prospects of hydrogen, and to inform discussions at the Hydrogen Energy Ministerial Meeting organised by Japan. The conflict in the Middle East is impacting global supplies of hydrogen and hydrogen derivatives, such as fertilisers, exposing vulnerabilities in their supply chains. As energy security concerns move higher up the policy agenda, this year's report considers the potential contributions of low-emissions hydrogen and hydrogen derivatives to enhancing energy security. It takes stock of deployment to date to assess the level of hydrogen uptake that could be achieved by 2030. This sixth edition of the Global Hydrogen Review includes novel analysis on what constitutes an acceptable cost for low-emissions hydrogen across multiple applications and regions. It concludes with a special focus chapter exploring challenges and opportunities for the development of new supply chains for low-emissions hydrogen-based products in Africa. The report is published alongside updates to the Hydrogen Production and Infrastructure Projects Database and the online Hydrogen Tracker. These resources allow users to explore project-level information and data on announced and operational projects for the production of low-emissions hydrogen and for the development of hydrogen infrastructure. It also includes information on signed offtake agreements for low-emissions hydrogen and hydrogen derivatives, and details on more than 1 000 hydrogen policies worldwide that have been announced or implemented since 2020. Ãâó:https://www.iea.org/reports/global-hydrogen-review-2026 ÷ºÎÆÄÀÏ:https://iea.blob.core.windows.net/assets/18bdb40c-adac-4d7b-b774-f5c140684b5b/GlobalHydrogenReview2026.pdf
2026.06.24
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(5¿ù WEF) Artificial intelligence is triggering one of the largest infrastructure buildouts in modern history. This report examines the growing AI-energy-water-minerals-land nexus, and the systemic risks emerging from poorly coordinated expansion. It argues that the future of AI will not be determined by technology alone, but by whether governments and industry can build resilient, sustainable and socially responsible infrastructure systems around it. As technology companies invest hundreds of billions of dollars into advanced computing systems, the physical foundations of AI are rapidly expanding across the world. But behind the promise of AI lies an often-overlooked reality: AI depends on vast amounts of energy, water, land and critical minerals. Data centres require electricity and cooling. Chips and batteries rely on mineral extraction. Transmission corridors and computing facilities reshape land use patterns. The choices made today will decide whether AI becomes a driver of long-term prosperity and climate resilience, or a source of escalating environmental and resource stress. Ãâó:https://www.weforum.org/publications/building-resilient-and-scalable-ai-value-chains-a-nexus-strategy/ ÷ºÎÆÄÀÏ:https://reports.weforum.org/docs/WEF_Building_Resilient_and_Scalable_AI_Value_Chains_2026.pdf
2026.06.24
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