Hydrogen and new-energy data
Hydrogen and other new-energy vectors are scaling fast, and reliable data is scarce and valuable. This guide covers hydrogen and new-energy data and how to source it in an emerging market.
Why new-energy data matters now
Hydrogen, e-fuels and related vectors are central to decarbonising hard-to-abate sectors. Investment and policy are moving fast, but data on projects, costs and production is fragmented and immature.
The data landscape
- Projects and capacity: announced and operational facilities.
- Production and certification: volumes and origin guarantees.
- Costs and prices: production cost and emerging benchmarks.
- Demand: offtake and demand signals.
Common use cases
Investment and project analysis, supply-chain and offtake planning, policy and market monitoring, and certification and provenance.
Sourcing considerations
The sector is young, so coverage is uneven and definitions are still settling, especially around low-carbon certification. Combining project trackers, official data and specialist sources is necessary, and methodology must be scrutinised.
Delivery and governance
Most use cases use batches. Provenance and certification data matter for green claims. Licensing should be confirmed.
In a managed model
A managed partner can combine project, production and cost data into a coherent new-energy view as the market matures.
Young market, settling definitions
Hydrogen and new-energy data is scarce, valuable and immature: coverage is uneven and definitions, especially low-carbon certification, are still settling. Combining project trackers, official data and specialist sources is necessary, and methodology must be scrutinised before relying on figures.
Provenance for green claims
Where data supports green claims, provenance and certification data matter, so confirm method and licensing as the market matures.
- New-energy data is scarce, valuable and immature.
- Combine project, production, cost and demand data.
- Definitions, especially low-carbon certification, are still settling.
- Scrutinise methodology and confirm provenance for green claims.
Sources & further reading
- IEA: hydrogen and clean-energy data.
- European Commission: hydrogen strategy and certification.
- Project trackers and specialist providers.
- National energy agencies.
We combine project, production and cost data into a coherent new-energy view. Get a no-obligation quote.