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Deploy Industrial Green Hydrogen

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Industrial Green Hydrogen Feedstock

In this solution, green hydrogen replaces fossil fuel–based hydrogen for use as a feedstock in the production of more complex molecules such as ammonia for fertilizers and methanol for the production of other commodity chemicals. Green hydrogen production in this solution uses on-site renewable electricity or off-site renewable electricity that directly supplies the facility. It replaces hydrogen produced from fossil fuels. This solution does not include the use of green hydrogen as a fuel or as a feedstock in the production of hydrogen-based fuels.

Last updated March 16, 2026

Solution Basics

kg of hydrogen produced

t CO₂-eq (100-yr)/unit/yr
00.010.012median
units/yr
Current 1.3×10⁸ 02.6×10¹⁰5.0×10¹⁰
Achievable (Low to High)

Climate Impact

Gt CO₂-eq (100-yr)/yr
Current 0 0.310.6
Gradual

CO₂ ,CH₄, N₂O, BC

Additional Benefits

183,187
    183
  • 184
  • 185
  • 186
  • 187
  • 188
192,194

Overview

Green hydrogen in this solution is hydrogen produced from water by electrolysis using renewable electricity generated on-site or directly supplied from an off-site location. It can reduce emissions when replacing hydrogen made from fossil fuels as an industrial feedstock. 

Today, most hydrogen is produced through a chemical reaction of methane or coal with water that generates hydrogen and CO₂. Green hydrogen, made by splitting water into hydrogen and oxygen using electricity generated from renewables, accounts for less than 1% of current production (International Energy Agency [IEA], 2025a). The process of making green hydrogen generates no direct GHGs. Therefore, replacing fossil fuel–derived hydrogen with green hydrogen avoids all direct GHGs from the hydrogen production process. 

Hydrogen prolongs the lifespan and abundance of GHGs in the atmosphere when it leaks, and so can indirectly contribute to climate change. However, because this solution substitutes one source of hydrogen for another, it will have little to no effect on this indirect climate impact. 

The manufacture of industrial hydrogen from fossil fuels for all applications was responsible for 680 Mt of emissions in 2023 (IEA, 2024), nearly all of which could be eliminated by substituting green hydrogen.

In 2023, roughly 60% of industrial feedstock hydrogen was used to produce ammonia, a vital ingredient in nitrogen fertilizers while 30% was used to produce methanol (IEA, 2024), an ingredient in the manufacture of a wide range of chemicals, including plastics, building materials, and car parts (International Renewable Energy Agency [IRENA] & Methanol Institute, 2021). Although alternative low-carbon pathways exist for ammonia and methanol, these are difficult to scale, still under development, or reliant on biomass, which is a finite resource associated with potential land-use change and competing demand (IRENA & Methanol Institute, 2021; Rodriguez, 2025). 

While there are other ways to make low-carbon hydrogen, none has demonstrated potential to cut emissions from hydrogen production as effectively as this solution. For example, harvesting naturally occurring hydrogen is a nascent industry with lots of uncertainties (The Royal Society, 2025), and hydrogen made from biomass must compete for biomass with other hard-to-abate sectors. 

The greatest hurdle to green hydrogen deployment is cost. Green hydrogen is one-and-a-half to six times more expensive to produce than hydrogen from fossil fuels (IEA, 2024). Regulatory and demand uncertainty, licensing and permitting issues, and challenges with operational scale-up are also barriers to green hydrogen projects (IEA, 2024). Nevertheless, production capacity has started to grow: installed electrolyzer capacity doubled in 2023, supported by policies and incentives (Pavan et al., n.d.). 

Impact Calculator

Adjust effectiveness and adoption using range sliders to see resulting climate impact potential.

Effectiveness

0.012
t CO2-eq (100-yr)/unit/yr
25th
percentile
0.01
75th
percentile
0.016
0.012
median

Adoption

1.3×10⁸
kg of hydrogen produced/yr
Low
2.6×10¹⁰
High
5.0×10¹⁰
1.3×10⁸
current
Achievable Range

Climate Impact

0.00
Gt CO₂-eq/yr (100-yr)
05
which is the equivalent of
0.00%
of global emissions

The Details

Current State

Our analysis showed that replacing hydrogen made from fossil fuels with green hydrogen made using renewable electricity can reduce 0.012 t CO₂‑eq /kg hydrogen (20-yr and 100-yr basis, Table 1). 

This analysis does not include the emissions associated with manufacturing and installing electrolyzer equipment or the energy and emissions impacts of storing or transporting hydrogen if needed. 

Table 1. Effectiveness at reducing emissions.

Unit: t CO₂‑eq /kg green hydrogen, 100-yr basis

25th percentile 0.010
Mean 0.014
Median (50th percentile) 0.012
75th percentile 0.016

Our estimates put the levelized cost of making hydrogen (LCOH) from coal and natural gas without any form of carbon emissions capture at US$1.90/kg hydrogen, while we estimated the LCOH of green hydrogen from renewable electricity at US$3.60/kg green hydrogen. LCOH represents the average cost to make a kilogram of hydrogen over the facility’s lifetime and includes all installation, operating, and equity costs. These values are in line with the IEA’s estimate that renewable hydrogen costs one-and-a-half to six times more than unabated fossil-fuel based production (IEA, 2024), with most of the higher cost attributed to the upfront costs (IEA, 2025a). 

The LCOH for green hydrogen shows significant variability, ranging from US$1.40/kg for hydrogen from solar in Chile (Vartiainen et al., 2022) to US$10.60/kg for hydrogen from solar in Italy (Ademollo et al., 2025). This reflects geographic differences in renewable energy generation potential and costs as well as differences in electrolyzer technologies, financing terms, and project scales (Kim et al., 2025; Li et al., 2025). Variation also arises from how renewable electricity is produced. Some modeled green hydrogen LCOH values may be underestimates due to the higher cost of operating electrolyzers at less than full capacity when intermittent renewable generation is used (Ademollo et al., 2025). 

We do not report the cost per climate impact because most of our cost data are based on theoretical values, not real projects, and because LCOH values do not include revenues. 

Our data show a median learning rate of 18% for the electrolyzer technologies used to make green hydrogen (Table 2) based on five studies. In other words, for every doubling of electrolyzer capacity, the equipment costs decrease by 18%. This is a median value for many electrolyzer types, each of which varies in its technological maturity and rate of cost decline. Research is ongoing to reduce the capital cost of electrolyzers, improve the energy efficiency of the process, and increase operational lifetimes of the equipment (U.S. Department of Energy, n.d.). While these studies consistently indicate declining electrolyzer costs with cumulative electrolyzer capacity, IEA (2025a) reported that costs have recently risen, largely due to inflation. 

The fundamental technology for splitting water into hydrogen and oxygen using electricity was developed more than 230 years ago (Smolinka et al., 2022). The process is simple enough that it is used in high school science classes around the world, but more complex equipment is needed to make and collect hydrogen on an industrial scale. 

The production of green hydrogen requires additional equipment beyond electrolyzers, such as renewable power generators, water purification plants, and equipment to process hydrogen, all of which have their own learning rates. 

Table 2. Learning rate: drop in cost per doubling of installed electrolyzer.

Unit: %

25th percentile 15
Mean 20
Median (50th percentile) 18
75th percentile 24

Speed of action refers to how quickly a climate solution physically affects the atmosphere after it is deployed. This is different from speed of deployment, which is the pace at which solutions are adopted.

At Project Drawdown, we define the speed of action for each climate solution as emergency brake, gradual, or delayed.

Deploy Industrial Green Hydrogen Feedstock is a GRADUAL climate solution. It has a steady, linear impact on the atmosphere. 

Adoption

Based on IEA (2025c), we estimate that operational projects are currently making 130 million kg of green hydrogen for use as an industrial feedstock per year (Table 3). This represents less than 1% (55 Mt) of all industrial hydrogen demand in 2024 (IEA, 2025a). It may be an underestimate because we only included projects that we were able to confirm to use on-site renewable electricity or off-site renewable electricity that directly supplies the facility. 

The higher cost of green hydrogen relative to hydrogen made from fossil fuels is a major barrier to adoption, along with uncertain demand and regulatory environments (IEA, 2025a). 

Table 3. Current (2025) adoption level of green hydrogen as feedstock.

Unit: kg green hydrogen/yr

Estimate (from IEA (2025c)) 130,000,000

The IEA (2025a) has historical data on the production of low-carbon hydrogen using electrolysis for industrial applications; this includes green hydrogen but could also include hydrogen made from grid electricity. The data give an average annual rate of increase of 8.1 million kg/yr electrolytic hydrogen for use as an industrial feedstock and are likely an overestimate for purely green hydrogen (Table 4). Much of the added industrial low-carbon hydrogen from electrolysis was produced in China (IEA, 2025a). 

This rate of adoption is slower than expected; only 7% of anticipated 2023 projects have materialized, owing in part to high costs, limited demand, and lack of supportive policies (Odenweller & Ueckerdt, 2025). However, while there has been a decline overall in hydrogen offtake agreements, more than half of agreements signed are dedicated to the manufacture of ammonia and methanol, the two main industrial products that rely on hydrogen as a feedstock (IEA, 2025a). Between March 2025 and September 2025, the estimated production volume from operational industrial green hydrogen feedstock projects increased from 32 million kg/yr to 130 million kg/yr (data extracted from IEA, 2025b, 2025c).

Table 4. Low-carbon electrolytic hydrogen as feedstock, 2021–2024 adoption trend.

Unit: kg low-carbon electrolytic hydrogen/yr/yr

Estimate (from IEA 2025a) 8,100,000

Current demand for hydrogen as an industrial feedstock is 50 billion kg/yr (Table 5), all of which technically could be supplied with green hydrogen. This value is based on the IEA (2025a)’s estimate of 2024 industrial hydrogen demand, with 90% allocated to its use as a feedstock for ammonia and methanol production. Since demand for industrial hydrogen for ammonia production increased by 3.4% and for methanol production by 2.0% in 2023 (IEA, 2025a), the actual adoption ceiling will increase as the production of industrial hydrogen increases. 

Table 5. Green hydrogen as a feedstock adoption ceiling.

Unit: kg green hydrogen/yr

Estimate (from IEA 2025a) 50,000,000,000

We estimated that 26–50 billion kg/yr of fossil-based hydrogen could be replaced with green hydrogen as an industrial feedstock by 2050, which is 53–100% of today’s total demand (Table 6).

The Achievable – Low adoption level is an average of McKinsey & Company and Wood Mackenzie’s estimated percent of hydrogen supplied by “clean” or “low-carbon” hydrogen in 2050, which presumably includes hydrogen made from fossil fuels with capture of carbon emissions (Douglas et al., 2025; Gulli et al., 2024). Wood Mackenzie projects that only 33% of traditional carbon-intensive hydrogen will be replaced with low-carbon hydrogen, while McKinsey & Company expects at least 73% of hydrogen demand to be met with clean hydrogen. These estimates may be low, given that the EU has committed to deriving 42% of industrial hydrogen from renewable sources by 2030 and 60% by 2035 (European Parliament & Council of the European Union, 2023). 

The Achievable – High adoption level is set at 100% of today’s industrial feedstock hydrogen, consistent with McKinsey & Company’s upper-end projection that all hydrogen demand could be met by clean hydrogen by 2050 (Gulli et al., 2024). 

Table 6. Green hydrogen as a feedstock range of achievable adoption levels (kg hydrogen/yr).

Table 6. Green hydrogen as a feedstock range of achievable adoption levels.

Unit: kg green hydrogen/yr

Current adoption 130,000,000
Achievable – low 26,000,000,000
Achievable – high 50,000,000,000
Adoption ceiling 50,000,000,000

Impacts

Current adoption of green hydrogen as an alternative is too low to have a globally meaningful climate impact (less than 0.002 Gt CO₂‑eq/yr estimated on both 20- and 100-year basis). We estimate that green hydrogen could reduce 0.31 Gt CO₂‑eq/yr (100- and 20-year basis) of emissions at the Achievable – Low level and 0.60 Gt CO₂‑eq/yr (100- and 20-year basis) at the Achievable – High level (Table 7). This outcome is closely aligned with the IEA’s estimate that in 2023, industrial hydrogen use was responsible for 680 Mt CO₂‑eq/yr, 90% (0.61 Gt CO₂‑eq/yr ) of which is used as a feedstock for ammonia and methanol production (IEA, 2024). 

Table 7. Green hydrogen as a feedstock climate impact at different levels of adoption.

Unit: Gt CO₂‑eq/yr, 100-yr basis

Current adoption 0.00
Achievable – low 0.31
Achievable – high 0.60
Adoption ceiling 0.60

Income and Work

Research on the direct linkages of green hydrogen with employment is limited; however, the development and adoption of this technology is expected to create jobs (Anand et al., 2025). One study of the expansion of green hydrogen in Europe projected that by 2050, shifting to low-carbon hydrogen would directly create 18,000–50,000 jobs (Ganter et al., 2024). This is mostly driven by the higher labor demand of the electrolysis process. Some jobs associated with green hydrogen are in the construction sector and would not be permanent (Irarrazaval et al., 2026).

Health

Reducing air pollution by switching from fossil fuels to renewable energy decreases exposure to pollutants such as lead and fine particulate matter generated when hydrogen is made from fossil fuels, thereby improving the health of nearby communities (Cho et al., 2022; U.S. Environmental Protection Agency [U.S. EPA], 2025). These pollutants have been linked to increased morbidity from cardiovascular and respiratory disease, asthma, infections, and cancer (Gasparotto & Martinello, 2021) and to increased risk of premature mortality (Henneman et al., 2023).

Water Resources

Green hydrogen production is more water-efficient than most other types of hydrogen production, but water resource benefits can vary based on geography and renewable energy source (IRENA & Bluerisk, 2023; Du et al., 2024).

Air Quality

Displacing fossil fuel–based hydrogen with renewable energy–based hydrogen will reduce climate and air pollutants associated with burning higher-carbon fuels, such as CO₂, nitrogen oxides, methane, lead, and fine particulate matter (Anand et al., 2025; Cho et al., 2022; Paardekooper et al., 2020; U.S. EPA, 2025).

Other

This analysis defines green hydrogen as hydrogen made through electrolysis using onsite renewable electricity. However, many sources only provide data for electrolytic hydrogen, clean hydrogen, or low-carbon hydrogen. Each of these includes green hydrogen but may also include electrolytic hydrogen made using grid electricity, hydrogen made from biomass, or hydrogen made from fossil fuels with carbon capture and storage. We have clearly labeled when the data refer to the more generalized low-carbon electrolytic hydrogen rather than green hydrogen.

Adoption of green hydrogen as a feedstock depends on policy support for green hydrogen, regulations to drive demand for low-carbon end products made from hydrogen (Odenweller & Ueckerdt, 2025), and standardized certification for green hydrogen, including methodologies for GHG emissions monitoring (IEA, 2025a). Regulation and permitting issues can also delay green hydrogen projects and increase overall costs. 

We assumed that manufacture of methanol, ammonia, and other industrial products currently using hydrogen as a feedstock will not shift to new processes (e.g., biological) for their production. We also assumed that naturally occurring hydrogen (sometimes called white hydrogen) and other forms of very-low-carbon hydrogen will not compete with green hydrogen for use as an industrial feedstock. 

Green hydrogen requires a supply of purified water. Removing impurities, minerals, and ions from water has a carbon footprint (Henriksen et al., 2024); that cost is not included in this analysis. 

Investments in green hydrogen policies and programs to support its use as a feedstock can also support its use as a fuel. Many potential applications for green hydrogen as a fuel, however, are less practical, cost-effective, and efficient than direct electrification, and investments in green hydrogen infrastructure risk diverting efforts away from these better alternatives (Johnson et al., 2025). 

Green hydrogen production requires a water supply. Many existing and planned green hydrogen projects are in water-stressed regions, including China, India, the Gulf States, and parts of the European Union (IRENA & Bluerisk, 2023). However, hydrogen production by other processes also requires a water supply and can exceed the water demand for green hydrogen (Henriksen et al., 2024). 

There are embodied emissions associated with manufacturing and installing any industrial equipment, including the equipment used to make hydrogen of all kinds and renewable energy. Such emissions are not included in the analysis here, but they can be significant and their value depends on a variety of factors (Hermesmann & Müller, 2022; Iyer et al., 2024, National Renewable Energy Laboratory [NREL], 2021).

Competing

Methanol made from industrial green hydrogen could compete with biomass-derived methanol, a product of the Deploy Low-Emission Industrial Feedstocks solution, thereby reducing that solution’s impact. 

Consensus of effectiveness in reducing emissions: High

Green hydrogen that replaces fossil fuel–based hydrogen is widely regarded as an important approach for reducing emissions from this industrial feedstock. Blue hydrogen, made from fossil fuels with carbon capture and storage, competes with green hydrogen as a feedstock. However, incomplete carbon capture alongside methane leaks from natural gas extraction and transportation give blue hydrogen a notably higher carbon footprint (IEA, 2023). 

The IEA publishes an annual report on global hydrogen, including updates to global demand for hydrogen by sector, production routes, trade, investments, and policies (IEA, 2024, 2025a). These reports highlight how low-carbon electrolytic hydrogen production is increasing, albeit at a slower pace than previously expected. With 65 countries now having a hydrogen strategy and new policies being implemented in key regions, low-carbon hydrogen demand is expected to grow, with most new investments focused on low-carbon hydrogen as an industrial feedstock. 

Accelerating this growth is critically important to meet established GHG emission targets. Odenweller and Ueckerdt (2025) highlighted how plans for green hydrogen should focus on hard-to-electrify sectors, including industrial hydrogen feedstocks. They also emphasized the need for policymakers to use demand-side policies such as quotas and mandates along with developing plans to transition subsidies to market mechanisms such as fixed pricing mechanisms for green hydrogen and contracts for difference

The results presented in this document summarize findings from four reviews and meta-analyses, two databases, three reports, and 11 original studies reflecting current evidence from 10 countries, primarily China and the United States. We recognize this limited geographic scope creates bias, and hope this work inspires research and data sharing on this topic in underrepresented regions.

Take Action

Looking to get involved? Below are some key actions for this solution that can get you started, arranged according to different roles you may play in your professional or personal life.

These actions are meant to be starting points for involvement and are not intended to be prescriptive or necessarily suggest they are the most important or impactful actions to take. We encourage you to explore and get creative!

Lawmakers and Policymakers

  • Evaluate and implement green hydrogen feedstock proposals and policies independently of other green hydrogen solutions, such as green hydrogen fuels (see Mobilize Green Hydrogen for Aviation and Trucking).
  • Before approval, conduct thorough reviews of project proposals to ensure statistical rigor and feasibility of business plans; consider requiring beneficiaries of public incentives to have offtake agreements in place; create legal tools to claw back financial incentives if products fail to achieve targeted emissions intensities.
  • Ensure laws and regulations related to green hydrogen use as a feedstock are data-driven and adaptive with short review cycles to remain timely and relevant to the markets; avoid delays leading to loss of investments and project failures.
  • Use both demand- and supply-side interventions to help create stable markets for products made from green hydrogen, ensuring those products are suitable uses for green hydrogen given the alternatives available.
  • Seek to streamline permitting processes while aligning regulations with social and environmental safeguards.
  • Set into place policies to develop strong domestic renewable energy industries concurrently with policies promoting green hydrogen as a feedstock.
  • Offer incentives to relevant actors such as subsidies, grants, guarantees, concessional finance, public investments, tax credits, and contracts for difference for green hydrogen production for use as a feedstock and their derivatives; as the market matures and becomes competitive, gradually reduce these incentives to create long-term market stability.
  • Set into place demand-side policies such as sectoral quotas and mandates for products such as ammonia and methanol made with green hydrogen, but avoiding subsidies for uses that are better served by other low-carbon solutions.
  • Create or improve robust certification schemes for green hydrogen; include clear governance models, standards for how hydrogen would be tested, systems and timelines for evaluation, and enforcement and verification mechanisms.
  • Set deadlines for the retirement of fossil-fuel hydrogen plants for ammonia and methanol production.
  • Work with industry to develop domestic and/or diverse supply chains for electrolyzers and related components.
  • Help establish robust certification systems for low-carbon versions of common hydrogen products such as ammonia and methanol; develop information campaigns to help foster demand.
  • Design incentives and policies to stimulate local or regional production and advance R&D – particularly, to reduce costs and boost efficiency of commercial-scale electrolyzers.
  • Carefully conduct water supply and stress analyses for potential green hydrogen production sites to determine the impact a plant might have on the surrounding communities before approving; require green hydrogen facilities to regularly report on water use metrics.
  • Seek to locate green hydrogen plants near end users to facilitate transport and reduce costs.
  • Implement carbon taxes and remove subsidies from fossil fuel hydrogen.
  • Create regulations that limit the potential for hydrogen leaks and institute monitoring systems to reduce and/or eliminate leakage from infrastructure.
  • Consider creating market platforms and digital product passports that coordinate supply and demand and facilitate uptake for products made with green hydrogen such as ammonia and methanol.

Further information:

Practitioners

  • Design green hydrogen feedstock proposals independent of other green hydrogen solutions, such as green hydrogen fuels (see Mobilize Green Hydrogen for Aviation and Trucking).
  • Stay abreast of policies, regulations, developments to the enabling infrastructure, and the cost-competitiveness of green hydrogen to ensure your company is well positioned to take advantage of incentives, stays in compliance, and is able to respond to changing market conditions.
  • Take advantage of government incentives such as subsidies, grants, guarantees, concessional loans, public investments, tax credits, and contracts for difference; as the market matures and becomes competitive, gradually reduce your reliance on these incentives to create long-term market stability.
  • Take advantage of demand-side policies such as sectoral quotas and mandates.
  • Consider using green bonds to finance public projects or to de-risk markets.
  • Seek long-term flexible offtake agreements with both public and private actors; aim to establish the agreement before seeking publicly offered financial incentives.
  • Carefully conduct water supply and stress analyses for potential green hydrogen production sites to determine the impact a plant might have on the surrounding communities before approving; regularly report on water use metrics.
  • Seek to locate green hydrogen feedstock plants near end users to facilitate transport and reduce costs.
  • Identify and help foster markets in which consumers are willing to pay a premium for low-emissions products made from green hydrogen.
  • Establish programs to detect and repair leaks; invest in R&D to better detect, mitigate, and repair leaks.
  • Ensure project proposals are data-driven and statistically rigorous; do not announce green hydrogen feedstock projects prematurely or without commitments to follow through.
  • Join, help create, or improve existing certification schemes for green hydrogen, include clear governance models, standards for how hydrogen would be tested, systems and timelines for evaluation, and enforcement and verification mechanisms; voluntarily certify your operations if it is not required.
  • Commit to transparent business practices and provide publicly available data on aspects of production such as emissions intensity, cost, compliance, product life cycle, and other relevant components to facilitate policy and investment; help create open databases for hydrogen producers to share this information; verify data with third-party auditors.
  • Work with policymakers to develop domestic and/or diverse supply chains for electrolyzers and related components.
  • Invest in R&D, particularly to reduce costs and boost efficiency of commercial-scale electrolyzers.
  • Regularly monitor impacts of production facilities, – especially when using seawater for cooling, to minimize risks and harms to human well-being and/or nature.
  • Help standardize analysis for life-cycle impacts of green hydrogen to improve global comparisons.
  • Voluntarily use market platforms and digital product passports to coordinate supply and demand and facilitate uptake for products made with green hydrogen, such as ammonia and methanol.

Further information:

Business Leaders

  • Evaluate and implement green hydrogen feedstock proposals and policies independently of other green hydrogen solutions, such as green hydrogen fuels (see Mobilize Green Hydrogen for Aviation and Trucking).
  • Set realistic goals for green hydrogen as a feedstock, if relevant; incorporate them into corporate net-zero strategies.
  • Enter into long-term offtake agreements with green hydrogen producers or manufacturers that use green hydrogen; consider forming consortia to allow offtakers to act as equity partners.
  • Help cultivate demand by advertising the use of green hydrogen in your products, including end-use products such as food grown with fertilizers produced by green hydrogen.
  • Seek to de-risk green hydrogen production by investing in domestic and/or diverse supply chains, supportive infrastructure, and related equipment such as renewable energy production.
  • Take advantage of government incentives such as tax credits, if possible; seek to gradually reduce reliance on these incentives to create long-term market stability.
  • Join, help create, or improve existing certification schemes for green hydrogen, include clear governance models, standards for how hydrogen would be tested, systems and timelines for evaluation, and enforcement and verification mechanisms; voluntarily certify your operations and supply chain if certification is not required.

Further information:

Nonprofit Leaders

  • Propose green hydrogen feedstock programs and policies independent of other green hydrogen solutions, such as green hydrogen fuels (see Mobilize Green Hydrogen for Aviation and Trucking).
  • Operate or help with equipment testing and certification systems, market information disclosures, and onsite monitoring.
  • Urge governments to set into place long-term regulations, using both demand- and supply-side interventions to help create stable markets for products made from green hydrogen; when possible, urge policymakers to align regulations with international standards to facilitate trade – particularly for equipment needed to produce green hydrogen.
  • Advocate for policies that develop strong domestic renewable energy industries concurrently with policies promoting green hydrogen as a feedstock.
  • Join, help create, or improve existing certification schemes for green hydrogen, include clear governance models, standards for how hydrogen would be tested, systems and timelines for evaluation, and enforcement and verification mechanisms.
  • Advocate for financial incentives and favorable policies for products such as ammonia and methanol made from green hydrogen; urge policymakers to gradually reduce subsidies and replace them with market mechanisms such as fixed pricing or contracts for difference as the market matures.
  • Advocate for deadlines for the retirement of fossil-fuel hydrogen plants.
  • Help establish robust certification systems for common products such as ammonia and methanol; develop information campaigns to help foster demand.
  • Advocate for public incentives and policies to advance R&D, particularly to reduce costs and boost efficiency of commercial-scale electrolyzers; carry out open-access research on relevant topics to improve adoption, safety, cost, and efficiency.
  • Conduct water supply and stress analyses for potential green hydrogen production sites to determine the impact a plant might have on the surrounding communities.
  • Regularly monitor impacts of production facilities, especially when using seawater for cooling, to minimize risks and harms to human well-being and/or nature.
  • Advocate for carbon taxes and the removal of subsidies from fossil fuel hydrogen.
  • Create requirements, standards, and programs for digital product passports that coordinate supply and demand and facilitate uptake for products such as ammonia and methanol made with green hydrogen.

Further information:

Investors

  • Invest in green hydrogen feedstock projects independently of other green hydrogen solutions, such as green hydrogen fuels (see Mobilize Green Hydrogen for Aviation and Trucking).
  • Invest directly in the development of green hydrogen feedstock projects.
  • Offer low-interest loans, guarantees, and concessional financing for manufacturers, developers, and operators of green hydrogen feedstock projects; extend these investments to related technology such as renewable energy and water purification; offer these investments to products such as ammonia and methanol made from green hydrogen feedstock.
  • Directly invest in companies that produce end-use products such as food produced with fertilizers made from green hydrogen.
  • Invest in R&D, component technology, and related science, especially in areas that reduce costs, boost efficiency, improve longevity, and decrease material inputs; invest in projects or companies that improve the modularity for electrolyzers and related components to improve mass production.
  • Help de-risk green hydrogen feedstock production in low- and middle-income countries by offering low-interest loans, concessional financing, and/or favorable terms.
  • Align investments with existing voluntary agreements or voluntary guidance that might apply in the location of the investment (including those that apply to biodiversity).

Further information:

Philanthropists and International Aid Agencies

  • Provide financing directly for the development of green hydrogen feedstock projects and ensure they are independent of other green hydrogen solutions, such as green hydrogen fuels (see Mobilize Green Hydrogen for Aviation and Trucking).
  • Help de-risk green hydrogen feedstock production in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) by offering grants or access to concessional financing for green hydrogen feedstock production.
  • Offer similar grants and financing for related technologies such as renewable energy and water purification; offer the same support for production of end-use products such as ammonia and methanol.
  • Operate or support efforts for equipment testing and certification systems, market information disclosures, and onsite monitoring.
  • Enter into long-term offtake agreements with manufacturers that use green hydrogen.
  • Urge governments to set into place long-term regulations, using both demand- and supply-side interventions to help create stable markets for products of green hydrogen; when possible, urge policymakers to align regulations with international standards to facilitate trade – particularly for equipment needed to produce green hydrogen.
  • Advocate for policies that develop strong domestic renewable energy industries concurrently with policies promoting green hydrogen as a feedstock.
  • Join, help create, or improve existing certification schemes for green hydrogen, include clear governance models, standards for how hydrogen would be tested, systems and timelines for evaluation, and enforcement and verification mechanisms.
  • Advocate for financial incentives and favorable policies for equipment needed to produce green hydrogen such as renewable power generators and water purification plants.
  • Advocate for financial incentives and favorable policies for products such as ammonia and methanol made from green hydrogen; urge policymakers to gradually reduce subsidies and replace them with market mechanisms such as fixed pricing or contracts for difference as the market matures.
  • Advocate for deadlines for the retirement of fossil-fuel hydrogen plants.
  • Help establish robust certification systems for common products such as ammonia and methanol; develop information campaigns to help foster demand.
  • Advocate for public incentives and policies to advance R&D, particularly to reduce costs and boost efficiency of commercial-scale electrolyzers; carry out open-access research on relevant topics to improve adoption, safety, cost, and efficiency.
  • Fund projects that provide water supply and stress analysis for potential green hydrogen production sites to determine the impact a plant might have on the surrounding communities.
  • Provide funding or assistance to projects that regularly monitor impacts of production facilities, especially when using seawater for cooling, to minimize risks and harms to human well-being and/or nature.
  • Advocate for carbon taxes and the removal of subsidies from fossil-fuel hydrogen.
  • Help establish international standards for measuring hydrogen leaks and help collect related data.
  • Create requirements, standards, and programs for digital product passports that coordinate supply and demand and facilitate uptake of products made with green hydrogen such as ammonia and methanol.

Further information:

Thought Leaders

  • Promote green hydrogen feedstock programs and policies independently of other green hydrogen solutions, such as green hydrogen fuels (see Mobilize Green Hydrogen for Aviation and Trucking).
  • Operate or help with equipment testing and certification systems, market information disclosures, and onsite monitoring.
  • Urge governments to set into place long-term regulations, using both demand- and supply-side interventions to help create stable markets for products of green hydrogen; when possible, urge policymakers to align regulations with international standards to facilitate trade – particularly for equipment needed to produce green hydrogen.
  • Advocate for policies that develop strong domestic renewable energy industries concurrently with policies promoting green hydrogen as a feedstock.
  • Join, help create, or improve existing certification schemes for green hydrogen, include clear governance models, standards for how hydrogen would be tested, systems and timelines for evaluation, and enforcement and verification mechanisms.
  • Advocate for financial incentives and favorable policies for equipment needed to produce green hydrogen feedstocks such as renewable power generators and water purification plants.
  • Advocate for financial incentives and favorable policies for products such as ammonia and methanol made from green hydrogen; urge policymakers to gradually reduce subsidies and replace them with market mechanisms such as fixed pricing or contracts for difference as the market matures.
  • Advocate for deadlines for the retirement of fossil-fuel hydrogen plants.
  • Help establish robust certification systems for common products such as ammonia and methanol; develop information campaigns to help foster demand.
  • Advocate for public incentives and policies to advance R&D, particularly to reduce costs and boost efficiency of commercial-scale electrolyzers; carry out open-access research on relevant topics to improve adoption, safety, cost, and efficiency.
  • Advocate for and/or conduct water supply and stress analysis for potential green hydrogen production sites and advocate for measures to avoid or redress harm to surrounding communities.
  • Regularly monitor impacts of production facilities, especially when using seawater for cooling, to minimize risks and harms to human well-being and/or nature.
  • Advocate for carbon taxes and removal of subsidies from fossil-fuel hydrogen.
  • Help standardize analysis for life-cycle impacts of green hydrogen to improve global comparisons.
  • Create requirements, standards, and programs for digital product passports that coordinate supply and demand and facilitate uptake for products such as ammonia and methanol made with green hydrogen.

Further information:

Technologists and Researchers

  • Develop electrolyzer technology for commercial-scale equipment to reduce costs, boost efficiency, improve longevity, and decrease material inputs; help improve modularity for electrolyzers and related components to improve mass production.
  • Improve cooling technology to increase water efficiency, reduce costs, and mitigate impacts on human well-being and the environment.
  • Develop and further improve upon air-cooling technologies.
  • Develop more sensitive leak detection equipment to identify smaller leaks that often go undetected by current technology.

Further information:

Communities, Households, and Individuals

  • Promote green hydrogen feedstock programs and policies independently of other green hydrogen solutions, such as green hydrogen fuels (see Mobilize Green Hydrogen for Aviation and Trucking).
  • Advocate for thorough reviews of project proposals to ensure statistical rigor and feasibility of business plans; consider requiring beneficiaries of public incentives to have offtake agreements in place; suggest legal tools to claw back financial incentives if products fail to achieve targeted emissions intensities.
  • Advocate for policies that develop strong domestic renewable energy industries concurrently with policies promoting green hydrogen as a feedstock.
  • Advocate for financial incentives and favorable policies for equipment needed to produce green hydrogen such as renewable power generators and water purification plants.
  • Advocate for deadlines for the retirement of fossil-fuel hydrogen plants.
  • Advocate for carbon taxes and removal of subsidies for fossil fuel hydrogen.

Further information:

“Take Action” Sources

References

Ademollo, A., Calabrese, M., & Carcasci, C. (2025). An up-to-date perspective of levelized cost of hydrogen for PV-based grid-connected power-to-hydrogen plants across all Italy. Applied Energy379, 124958. Link to source: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apenergy.2024.124958  

Anand, C., Chandraja, B., Nithiya, P., Akshaya, M., Tamizhdurai, P., Shoba, G., Subramani, A., Kumaran, R., Yadav, K. K., Gacem, A., Bhutto, J. K., Alreshidi, M. A., & Alam, M. W. (2025). Green hydrogen for a sustainable future: A review of production methods, innovations, and applications. International Journal of Hydrogen Energy111, 319–341. Link to source: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijhydene.2025.02.257  

Cho, H. H., Strezov, V., & Evans, T. J. (2022). Environmental impact assessment of hydrogen production via steam methane reforming based on emissions data. Energy Reports8, 13585–13595. Link to source: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.egyr.2022.10.053  

Douglas, M., Trilho, M., & Pellegrinelli, T. (2025). Hydrogen: The outlook to 2050. Wood Mackenzie. Link to source: https://www.woodmac.com/news/opinion/hydrogen-the-outlook-to-2050/  

Du, L., Yang, Y., Bai, X., Xu, S., Lin, L., & Liu, M. (2024). Water scarcity footprint and water saving potential for large-scale green hydrogen generation: Evidence from coal-to-hydrogen substitution in China. Science of The Total Environment940, 173589. Link to source: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.173589  

European Parliament, & Council of the European Union. (2023). Directive (EU) 2023/2413 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 18 October 2023 amending directive (EU) 2018/2001, regulation (EU) 2018/1999 and directive 98/70/EC as regards the promotion of energy from renewable sources, and repealing council directive (EU) 2015/652 (No. 2023/2413). Link to source: https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/PDF/?uri=OJ:L_202302413 

Ganter, A., Lonergan, K. E., Büchi, H. M., & Sansavini, G. (2024). Shifting to low-carbon hydrogen production supports job creation but does not guarantee a just transition. One Earth7(11), 1981–1993. Link to source: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.oneear.2024.10.009  

Gasparotto, J., & Da Boit Martinello, K. (2021). Coal as an energy source and its impacts on human health. Energy Geoscience2(2), 113–120. Link to source: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.engeos.2020.07.003  

Gulli, C., Heid, B., Noffsinger, J., Waardenburg, M., & Wilthaner, M. (2024). Global energy perspectives 2023: Hydrogen outlook. McKinsey & Company. Link to source: https://www.mckinsey.com/industries/oil-and-gas/our-insights/global-energy-perspective-2023-hydrogen-outlook  

Henneman, L., Choirat, C., Dedoussi, I., Dominici, F., Roberts, J., & Zigler, C. (2023). Mortality risk from United States coal electricity generation. Science382(6673), 941–946. Link to source: https://doi.org/10.1126/science.adf4915  

Henriksen, M. S., Matthews, H. S., White, J., Walsh, L., Grol, E., Jamieson, M., & Skone, T. J. (2024). Tradeoffs in life cycle water use and greenhouse gas emissions of hydrogen production pathways. International Journal of Hydrogen Energy49, 1221–1234. Link to source: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijhydene.2023.08.079  

Hermesmann, M., & Müller, T. E. (2022). Green, turquoise, blue, or grey? Environmentally friendly hydrogen production in transforming energy systems. Progress in Energy and Combustion Science90, 100996. Link to source: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pecs.2022.100996  

International Energy Agency. (2023). Towards hydrogen definitions based on their emissions intensity. Link to source: https://iea.blob.core.windows.net/assets/acc7a642-e42b-4972-8893-2f03bf0bfa03/Towardshydrogendefinitionsbasedontheiremissionsintensity.pdf  

International Energy Agency. (2024). Global hydrogen review 2024. Link to source: https://iea.blob.core.windows.net/assets/89c1e382-dc59-46ca-aa47-9f7d41531ab5/GlobalHydrogenReview2024.pdf 

International Energy Agency. (2025a). Global hydrogen review 2025. Link to source: https://iea.blob.core.windows.net/assets/12d92ecc-e960-40f3-aff5-b2de6690ab6b/GlobalHydrogenReview2025.pdf  

International Energy Agency. (2025b). Hydrogen production and infrastructure projects database March 2025 [Dataset]. Link to source: https://www.iea.org/data-and-statistics/data-product/hydrogen-production-and-infrastructure-projects-database  

International Energy Agency. (2025c). Hydrogen production and infrastructure projects database September 2025 [Dataset]. Link to source: https://www.iea.org/data-and-statistics/data-product/hydrogen-production-and-infrastructure-projects-database  

Irarrazaval, F., Albornoz, C., & Bogolasky, F. (2026). The troubled geography of green jobs: Examining the estimations and expectations of green hydrogen development in regional labor markets in Chile. Applied Geography186, 103828. Link to source: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apgeog.2025.103828 

International Renewable Energy Agency, & Bluerisk. (2023). Water for hydrogen production. Link to source: https://www.irena.org/-/media/Files/IRENA/Agency/Publication/2023/Dec/IRENA_Bluerisk_Water_for_hydrogen_production_2023.pdf  

International Renewable Energy Agency & Methanol Institute. (2021). Innovation outlook: Renewable methanol. International Renewable Energy Agency. Link to source: https://www.methanol.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/IRENA_Innovation_Renewable_Methanol_2021.pdf  

Iyer, R. K., Prosser, J. H., Kelly, J. C., James, B. D., & Elgowainy, A. (2024). Life-cycle analysis of hydrogen production from water electrolyzers. International Journal of Hydrogen Energy81, 1467–1478. Link to source: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijhydene.2024.06.355  

Johnson, N., Liebreich, M., Kammen, D. M., Ekins, P., McKenna, R., & Staffell, I. (2025). Realistic roles for hydrogen in the future energy transition. Nature Reviews Clean Technology1(5), 351–371. Link to source: https://doi.org/10.1038/s44359-025-00050-4  

Kim, H., Song, G., & Ha, Y. (2025). Green hydrogen export potential in each Southeast Asian country based on exportable volumes and levelized cost of hydrogen. Applied Energy383, 125371. Link to source: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apenergy.2025.125371  

Li, Y., Hao, J., & Zhou, Y. (2025). Economic analysis of different hydrogen production routes under a CO2 pricing mechanism – A levelized cost of hydrogen based study. International Journal of Hydrogen Energy128, 47–67. Link to source: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijhydene.2025.04.185  

National Renewable Energy Laboratory. (2021). Life cycle greenhouse gas emissions from electricity generation: update. Link to source: https://docs.nlr.gov/docs/fy21osti/80580.pdf  

Odenweller, A., & Ueckerdt, F. (2025). The green hydrogen ambition and implementation gap. Nature Energy10(1), 110–123. Link to source: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41560-024-01684-7  

Paardekooper, S., Lund, H., Chang, M., Nielsen, S., Moreno, D., & Thellufsen, J. Z. (2020). Heat Roadmap Chile: A national district heating plan for air pollution decontamination and decarbonisation. Journal of Cleaner Production272, 122744. Link to source: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jclepro.2020.122744  

Pavan, F., Bermudez, J. M., Pizarro, A., Remme, U., & Blanco, H. (n.d.). Electrolysers. International Energy Agency. Retrieved October 10, 2025 from Link to source: https://www.iea.org/energy-system/low-emission-fuels/electrolysers  

Rodriguez, E. (2025, January 30). Low-carbon ammonia technology: Blue, green, and beyond. Rocky Mountain Institute. Link to source: https://rmi.org/low-carbon-ammonia-technology-blue-green-and-beyond/  

Smolinka, T., Bergmann, H., Garche, J., & Kusnezoff, M. (2022). The history of water electrolysis from its beginnings to the present. In Smolinka & Garche (Eds.), Electrochemical power sources: Fundamentals, systems, and applications (pp. 83–164). Elsevier. Link to source: https://doi.org/10.1016/B978-0-12-819424-9.00010-0  

The Royal Society. (2025). Natural hydrogen: Future energy and resources Policy briefing. Link to source: https://royalsociety.org/-/media/policy/projects/natural-hydrogen/natural-hydrogen-policy-briefing.pdf  

U.S. Department of Energy. (n.d.). Hydrogen production: Electrolysis. Retrieved October 10, 2025, from Link to source: https://www.energy.gov/eere/fuelcells/hydrogen-production-electrolysis  

US Environmental Protection Agency. (2025). Power sector programs—Progress report. Link to source: https://www.epa.gov/power-sector/progress-report  

Vartiainen, E., Breyer, C., Moser, D., Román Medina, E., Busto, C., Masson, G., Bosch, E., & Jäger-Waldau, A. (2022). True cost of solar hydrogen. Solar RRL6(5), 2100487. Link to source: https://doi.org/10.1002/solr.202100487  

Credits

Lead Fellow

  • Heather McDiarmid, Ph.D. 

Contributors

  • Ruthie Burrows, Ph.D.

  • James Gerber, Ph.D.

  • Daniel Jasper

  • Alex Sweeney

Internal Reviewers

  • Nina-Francesca Farac, Ph.D.

  • James Gerber, Ph.D.

  • Amanda D. Smith, Ph.D.

  • Greenhouse gas quantity expressed relative to CO₂ with the same warming impact over 100 years, calculated by multiplying emissions by the 100-yr GWP for the emitted gases.

  • Greenhouse gas quantity expressed relative to CO with the same warming impact over 20 years, calculated by multiplying emissions by the 20-yr GWP for the emitted gases.

  • 8th World Congress on Conservation Agriculture

  • Reducing greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere by preventing or reducing emissions.

  • Air conditioning

  • A liquid with a low pH (below 7).

  • The process of increasing acidity.

  • The extent to which emissions reduction or carbon removal is above and beyond what would have occurred without implementing a particular action or solution.

  • An upper limit on solution adoption based on physical or technical constraints, not including economic or policy barriers. This level is unlikely to be reached and will not be exceeded.

  • The quantity and metric to measure implementation for a particular solution that is used as the reference unit for calculations within that solution.

  • A composting method in which organic waste is processed in freestanding piles that can be aerated actively with forced air or passively by internal convection.

  • The interactions of aerodynamic forces and flexible structures, often including the stucture's control system.

  • A process in which microbes break down organic materials in the presence of oxygen. This process converts food and green waste into nutrient-rich compost.

  • Establishment of new forests in areas that did not historically support forests.

  • Farming practices that work to create socially and ecologically sustainable food production.

  • Addition of trees and shrubs to crop or animal farming systems.

  • Artificial intelligence

  • Spread out the cost of an asset over its useful lifetime.

  • A process in which microorganisms break down organic material in the absence of oxygen. Methane and CO₂ are the main byproducts.

  • A crop that live one year or less from planting to harvest; also called annual.

  • aerated static piles

  • Electric power delivered at a steady, around-the-clock rate, to cover power demand that exists at all times. Baseload power is typically supplied by high availability, low operating-cost plants, such as nuclear or geothermal.

  • A liquid with a high pH (above 7).

  • black carbon

  • Solar panels that generate electricity from sunlight captured on both sides, increasing energy output by reflecting light from the ground and surroundings.

  • Made from material of biological origin, such as plants, animals, or other organisms.

  • A renewable energy source generated from organic matter from plants and/or algae.

  • An energy source composed primarily of methane and CO that is produced by microorganisms when organic matter decomposes in the absence of oxygen.

  • Carbon stored in biological matter, including soil, plants, fungi, and plant products (e.g., wood, paper, biofuels). This carbon is sequestered from the atmosphere but can be released through decomposition or burning.

  • Living or dead renewable matter from plants or animals, not including organic material transformed into fossil fuels. Peat, in early decay stages, is partially renewable biomass.

  • Biogas refined to the same quality as natural gas. CO₂ and impurities are removed, and the biomethane can be distributed and used in existing natural gas technologies.
     

  • A type of carbon sequestration that captures carbon from CO via photosynthesis and stores it in soils, sediments, and biomass, distinct from sequestration through chemical or industrial pathways.

  • A synthetic organic compound used to make a type of hard, clear plastic for food and drink packaging and many consumer goods.

  • A climate pollutant, also called soot, produced from incomplete combustion of organic matter, either naturally (wildfires) or from human activities (biomass or fossil fuel burning).

  • A secure, decentralized way of digitally tracking transactions that could be used to improve the transparency and efficiency of carbon markets. 

  • Fixed income debt instruments focused on sustainable ocean projects. Blue bonds work in the same manner as traditional bonds and may be issued by corporations, financial institutions, and governments.

  • A global initiative launched by Germany and the IUCN in 2011 to restore 150 Mha of land by 2020 and 350 Mha by 2030.

  • High-latitude (>50°N or >50°S) climate regions characterized by short growing seasons and cold temperatures.

  • bisphenol A

  • Revenue from carbon credits reserved for payout to land- and rights-holders in the event of a disturbance such as a fire; similar to insurance scheme.

  • The components of a building that physically separate the indoors from the outdoor environment.

  • Businesses involved in the sale and/or distribution of solution-related equipment and technology, and businesses that want to support adoption of the solution.

  • Compound annual growth rate

  • A chemical reaction involving heating a solid to a high temperature; to make cement clinker, limestone is calcined into lime in a process that requires high heat and produces CO.

  • The ratio of the actual electricity an energy technology generates over a period of time to the maximum it could have produced if it operated continuously at full capacity.

  • A four-wheeled passenger vehicle.

  • Average number of people traveling in a car per trip.

  • Technologies that collect CO before it enters the atmosphere, preventing emissions at their source. Collected CO can be used onsite or in new products, or stored long term to prevent release.

  • A greenhouse gas that is naturally found in the atmosphere. Its atmospheric concentration has been increasing due to human activities, leading to warming and climate impacts.

  • Total GHG emissions resulting from a particular action, material, technology, or sector.

  • Amount of GHG emissions released per activity or unit of production. 

  • A marketplace where carbon credits are purchased and sold. One carbon credit represents activities that avoid, reduce, or remove one metric ton of GHG emissions.

  • A colorless, odorless gas released during the incomplete combustion of fuels containing carbon. Carbon monoxide can harm health and be fatal at high concentrations.

  • The time it takes for the emissions reduction from a measure to equal the emissions invested in implementing the measure.

  • Activities or technologies that pull CO out of the atmosphere, including enhancing natural carbon sinks and deploying engineered sinks.

  • Long-term storage of carbon in soils, sediment, biomass, oceans, and geologic formations after removal of CO from the atmosphere or CO capture from industrial and power generation processes.

  • The interconnected pool of dissolved inorganic carbon forms in water. Composed of dissolved CO₂, carbonic acid, bicarbonate ions, and carbonate ions.

  • carbon capture and storage

  • carbon capture, utilization, and storage

  • Cooling degree days

  • A binding ingredient in concrete responsible for most of concrete’s life-cycle emissions. Cement is made primarily of clinker mixed with other mineral components.

  • chlorofluorocarbon

  • Processes that use chemical reactions or heat to break down plastic waste into basic molecular components or feedstocks that can then be used to make new plastic products.

  • Process that uses chemical reactions or heat to break down plastic waste into basic molecular components that can be used to make new plastic products.

  • methane

  • A system in which resources, materials, and products are used for as long as possible through reuse, repair, refurbishment, and recycling.

  • Energy sources that have little to no negative environmental or climate impacts during operation relative to fossil fuel–based energy sources.

  • Gases or particles that have a planet-warming effect when released to the atmosphere. Some climate pollutants also cause other forms of environmental damage.

  • Areas that have natural buffers from local climate change impacts, offering safe havens for species and ecosystems.

  • A binding ingredient in cement responsible for most of the life-cycle emissions from cement and concrete production.

  • A waste management process where waste is made into the same original product, preserving quality and value so materials can be reused multiple times while keeping resources in continuous use.

  • A system that encompasses both forward supply chains (from producer to consumer) and reverse logistics for reuse, recycling, or proper disposal.

  • Neighbors, volunteer organizations, hobbyists and interest groups, online communities, early adopters, individuals sharing a home, and private citizens seeking to support the solution.

  • A solution that potentially lowers the benefit of another solution through reduced effectiveness, higher costs, reduced or delayed adoption, or diminished global climate impact.

  • The average annual rate at which a value grows over a specified period, assuming profits are reinvested and growth occurs steadily each year.

  • Funding with substantially more generous terms than market loans (typically due to lower interest rates, longer repayment periods, or partial grants) used to support projects with public or development benefits.

  • A farming system that combines reduced tillage, cover crops, and crop rotations.

  • The proportion of water used or applied that is evaporated, transpired, or incorporated into a product and therefore is not returned to the local hydrological system through runoff or leaching.

  • Risk-sharing financial agreements in which two parties (e.g., renewable generator, government) guarantee a fixed price (e.g., electricity price). If market prices fluctuate, one party pays the other the difference.

  • Persistent long, thin clouds that form behind aircraft when water vapor in the exhaust condenses, then freezes into ice crystals at high altitudes. 

  • A measure of the total space cooling demand to maintain an indoor temperature below 24 °C

  • carbon dioxide

  • A  measure standardizing the warming effects of greenhouse gases relative to CO. CO-eq is calculated as quantity (metric tons) of a particular gas multiplied by its GWP.

  • carbon dioxide equivalent

  • Plant materials left over after a harvest, such as stalks, leaves, and seed husks.

  • A granular material made by crushing broken or waste glass.

  • direct air capture

  • Financial agreements in which government creditors forgive a portion of debt in exchange for specific conservation commitments.

  • The process of cutting greenhouse gas emissions (primarily CO) from a particular sector or activity.

  • An industrial process that removes printing ink from used or waste paper fibers, creating clean pulp that can be turned into new paper products.

  • A solution that works slower than gradual solutions and is expected to take longer to reach its full potential.

  • Microbial conversion of nitrate into inert nitrogen gas under low-oxygen conditions, which produces the greenhouse gas nitrous oxide as an intermediate compound.

  • Electronic document that verifies whether a product has been manufactured according to environmental and social standards and/or material origins, environmental impact, and disposal recommendations.

  • Electronic documents that verify whether or not a product has been manufactured according to environmental and social standards and/or material origins, environmental impact, and disposal recommendations.

  • Greenhouse gas emissions produced as a direct result of the use of a technology or practice.

  • Electric power that can be increased, decreased, or turned on/off to match real-time fluctuations in grid conditions. Typically supplied by fast-responding plants such as natural gas, hydroelectric, or battery storage.

  • The inorganic forms of carbon dissolved in seawater. Composed of dissolved CO₂, carbonic acid, bicarbonate ions, and carbonate ions.

  • A system of underground distribution pipes that supply heat from centralized sources to a large number of buildings for space and water heating or industrial use.

  • A window consisting of two glass panes separated by a sealed gap and typically filled with air or an inert gas to improve the heat flow resistance.

  • A waste management system that transforms waste into different products of lower quality and value, making materials harder to recycle again and limiting reuse.

  • Flexible benchmarks derived from independent, publicly available, frequently updated data sets.

  • European Energy Agency

  • Ability of a solution to reduce emissions or remove carbon, expressed in CO-eq per installed adoption unit. Effectiveness is quantified per year when the adoption unit is cumulative over time.

  • Enhanced geothermal system

  • Exajoule (one quintillion joules)

  • A process that uses electric current to drive a reaction, such as using electricity to split water molecules into hydrogen and oxygen.

  • Produced by electrolysis.

  • Greenhouse gas emissions accrued over the lifetime of a material or product, including as it is produced, transported, used, and disposed of.

  • Solutions that work faster than gradual solutions, front-loading their impact in the near term.

  • Methane produced by microbes in the digestive tracts of ruminant livestock, such as cattle, sheep and goats.

  • The unintended capture of organisms in intake flows.

  • Environmental Protection Agency

  • Extended Producer Responsibility

  • expanded polystyrene

  • Environmental Research & Education Foundation

  • environmental, social, and governance

  • exchange-traded fund

  • A process triggered by an overabundance of nutrients in water, particularly nitrogen and phosphorus, that stimulates excessive plant and algae growth and can harm aquatic organisms.

  • Electric vehicle

  • The movement of water from the earth’s surface to the atmosphere directly from land or water surfaces (evaporation) and through plant tissues (transpiration).

     

  • The scientific literature that supports our assessment of a solution's effectiveness.

  • A policy framework that assigns responsibility to producers for the end-of-life servicing of their products.

  • A group of human-made molecules that contain fluorine atoms. They are potent greenhouse gases with GWPs that can be hundreds to thousands times higher than CO.

  • Food, agriculture, land, and ocean

  • Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations

  • feed conversion ratio

  • The efficiency with which an animal converts feed into increased body mass, measured as the ratio of the weight of the feed given to weight gain. Lower FCR means less feed for the same growth.

  • Raw material inputs for manufacturing, processing, and managing waste.

  • Containing or consisting of iron.

  • A measure of fishing activity over time and area, commonly measured by number of trips, vessel time, or gear deployed.

  • A solar PV system with panels mounted at a constant angle.

  • Glass is manufactured by floating molten glass on a molten tin bath, producing a smooth, flat product with high optical clarity, often used for window applications.

  • food loss and waste

  • Food discarded during pre-consumer supply chain stages, including production, harvest, and processing.

  • Food discarded during pre-consumer supply chain stages, including production, harvest, and processing, along with food discarded wt the retail and consumer stages of the supply chain.

  • Food discarded at the retail and consumer stages of the supply chain.

  • Combustible materials found in Earth's crust that can be burned for energy, including oil, natural gas, and coal. They are formed from decayed organisms through prehistoric geological processes.

  • Free, prior, and informed consent

  • A principled process of working with Indigenous communities that requires consent from Indigenous peoples for any decision, action, or activity that impacts their community and/or lands.

  • Unintentional leaks of gases or vapor into the atmosphere.

  • A group of countries representing the majority of the world's population, trade, and GDP. There are 19 member countries plus the European Union and the African Union

  • Gas collection and control system

  • A design or approach to policy, programs, or activities that addresses the different situations, roles, needs, and interests of women, men, girls, and boys.

  • Manipulating the environment to influence the quantities or impact of climate pollutants in the atmosphere.

  • greenhouse gas

  • Global Horizontal Irradiance

  • gigajoule or billion joules

  • The glass layers or panes in a window.

  • A measure of how effectively a gas traps heat in the atmosphere relative to CO. GWP converts greenhouse gases into CO-eq emissions based on their 20- or 100-year impacts.

  • A solution that has a steady impact on the atmosphere. Effectiveness is expected to be constant over time rather than having a higher impact in the near or long term.

  • A system that uses the slope of a field and furrows, borders, or flooding to apply water without pumping.

  • Hydrogen produced from natural gas, most commonly by combining heated steam with methane. Producing grey hydrogen emits CO₂ and leaks methane. Most hydrogen made today is grey.

  • A fixed income debt instrument focused on sustainable projects. Green bonds work in the same manner as traditional bonds and may be issued by corporations, financial institutions, and governments.

  • A fixed income debt instrument focused on sustainable projects. They work in the same manner as traditional bonds and may be issued by corporations, financial institutions, and governments.

  • Hydrogen gas made through electrolysis using electricity produced onsite using renewable energy sources.

  • The practice of charging more for renewable energy than for conventional energy to cover added costs .

  • Roofs that are designed to be partially or completely covered in vegetation.

  • Biomass discarded during landscaping and gardening.

  • A gas that traps heat in the atmosphere, contributing to climate change.

  • The makeup of electricity generation on a power grid, showing the share contributed by various energy sources (e.g., coal, natural gas, nuclear, wind, solar, hydro) relative to total electricity production.

  • A process by which GHGs dissolved in groundwater are released to the atmosphere when the groundwater is extracted from the aquifer.

  • metric gigatons or billion metric tons

  • global warming potential

  • A low-carbon steel-making technology that uses hydrogen from water, direct reduction of iron, and electric arc furnaces. 

  • hectare

  • household air pollution

  • A sector or process that is exceptionally challenging to decarbonize, often because of a lack of mature technology options.  

  • hydrochlorofluorocarbon

  • Number of years a person is expected to live without disability or other limitations that restrict basic functioning and activity.

  • A measure of the total space heating demand to maintain an indoor temperature above 18 °C

  • A unit of land area comprising 10,000 square meters, roughly equal to 2.5 acres.

  • Hybrid electric car

  • hydrofluorocarbon

  • hydrofluoroolefin

  • hydrofluoroolefin

  • high-income countries

  • Metal waste that is produced at a mill or foundry during the metal production process and recycled internally.

  • Particles and gases released from use of polluting fuels and technologies such as biomass cookstoves that cause poor air quality in and around the home.

  • heating, ventilation, air conditioning, and refrigeration

  • Organic compounds that contain hydrogen and carbon.

  • Human-made F-gases that contain hydrogen, fluorine, and carbon. They typically have short atmospheric lifetimes and GWPs hundreds or thousands times higher than CO

  • Human-made F-gases that contain hydrogen, fluorine, and carbon, with at least one double bond. They have low GWPs and can be climate-friendly alternatives to HFC refrigerants.

  • Hydrogen is a gas that can be a fuel, feedstock, or means of storing energy. It generates water instead of GHG when burned, but the process of producing it can emit high levels of GHGs. 

  • A recycling process that separates fibers from contaminants for reuse. Paper or cardboard is mixed with water to break down fibrous materials into pulp.

  • internal combustion engine

  • International Energy Agency

  • Aerobic decomposition of organic waste in a sealed container or bin/bay system. 

  • Greenhouse gas emissions produced as a result of a technology or practice but not directly from its use.

  • A solid block of purified silicon formed by melting and crystallizing raw silicon; it serves as the base material for slicing into wafers used in solar cells.

  • Device used to power vehicles by the intake, compression, combustion, and exhaust of fuel that drives moving parts.

  • The annual discount rate that balances net cash flows for a project over time. Also called IRR, internal rate of return is used to estimate profitability of potential investments.

  • Individuals or institutions willing to lend money in search of a return on their investment.

  • Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change

  • Indigenous peoples’ land

  • Integrated pest management.

  • internal rate of return

  • The timing and amount of irrigation water applied.

  • International Union for Conservation of Nature

  • The most comprehensive global list of species threatened with extinction, maintained by the International Union for Conservation of Nature.

  • International agreement adopted in 2016 to phase down the use of high-GWP HFC F-gases over the time frame 2019–2047.

  • A measure of energy equivalent to the energy delivered by 1,000 watts of power over one hour.

  • kiloton or one thousand metric tons

  • kilowatt-hour

  • The intentional or unintentional act of property use crossing ownership boundaries without permission.

  • A land-holding system, e.g. ownership, leasing, or renting. Secure land tenure means farmers or other land users will maintain access to and use of the land in future years.

  • Gases, mainly methane and CO, created by the decomposition of organic matter in the absence of oxygen.

  • levelized cost of electricity

  • leak detection and repair

  • Regular monitoring for fugitive methane leaks throughout oil and gas, coal, and landfill sector infrastructure and the modification or replacement of leaking equipment.

  • Relocation of emissions-causing activities outside of a mitigation project area rather than a true reduction in emissions.

  • The rate at which solution costs decrease as adoption increases, based on production efficiencies, technological improvements, or other factors.

  • Percent decrease in costs per doubling of adoption.

  • A metric describing the expected break-even cost of generating electricity per megawatt-hour ($/MWh), combining costs related to capital, operation, and fuel (if used) and dividing by total output over the generator's lifetime.

  • landfill gas

  • Greenhouse gas emissions from the sourcing, production, use, and disposal of a technology or practice.

  • A process that converts biomass, plastics, or other solid wastes into liquid fuel or chemicals.

  • The total weight of an organism before any meat processing.

  • low- and middle-income countries

  • liquefied petroleum gas

  • land use change

  • A measure of the amount of light produced by a light source per energy input.

  • live weight

  • Mobility as a Service

  • marginal abatement cost curve

  • Livestock grazing practices that strategically manage livestock density, grazing intensity, and timing. Also called improved grazing, these practices have environmental, soil health, and climate benefits, including enhanced soil carbon sequestration.

  • A tool to measure and compare the financial cost and abatement benefit of individual actions based on the initial and operating costs, revenue, and emission reduction potential.

  • Periods of unusually warm ocean temperatures that typically last from days to months and can affect large areas of the ocean.

  • Defined by the International Union for Conservation of Nature as: "A clearly defined geographical space, recognised, dedicated and managed, through legal or other effective means, to achieve the long-term conservation of nature with associated ecosystem services and cultural values." References to PAs here also include other effective area-based conservation measures defined by the IUCN. 

  • The transfer of economic activity or environmental impact from one area to another as a result of conservation activities, often having the effect of reducing or offsetting intended benefits.

  • The transfer of economic activity or environmental impact from one location to another as a result of conservation activities, often having the effect of reducing or offsetting intended benefits.

  • A facility that receives recyclable waste from residential, commercial, and industrial sources; separates, processes, and prepares them; and then sells them to manufacturers for reuse in new products.

  • A measure of energy equivalent to the energy delivered by one million watts of power over one hour.

  • A greenhouse gas with a short lifetime and high GWP that can be produced through a variety of mechanisms including the breakdown of organic matter.

  • A measure of mass equivalent to 1,000 kilograms (~2,200 lbs).

  • million hectares

  • The natural process by which microbes convert matter to energy, often producing CO₂ or other GHGs as a byproduct.

  • Soils mostly composed of inorganic materials formed through the breakdown of rocks. Most soils are mineral soils, and they generally have less than 20% organic matter by weight.

  • A localized electricity system that independently generates and distributes power. Typically serving limited geographic areas, mini-grids can operate in isolation or interconnected with the main grid.

  • Reducing the concentration of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere by cutting emissions or removing CO.

  • megajoule or one million joules

  • Digital platform that integrates transport modes such as public transit, carpooling, and bike sharing into a single service, allowing users to plan, book, and pay for multimodal trips through one application.

  • Percent of trips made by different passenger and freight transportation modes.

  • A condition of being diseased, unhealthy, or injured.

  • Marine Protected Area

  • materials recovery facility

  • Municipal solid waste

  • megaton or million metric tons

  • Materials discarded from residential and commercial sectors, including organic waste, glass, metals, plastics, paper, and cardboard.

  • megawatt

  • Megawatt-hour

  • micro wind turbine

  • square meter kelvins per watt (a measure of thermal resistance, also called R-value)

  • nitrous oxide

  • The enclosed housing at the top of a wind turbine tower that contains the main mechanical and electrical components of the turbine.

  • A commitment from a country to reduce national emissions and/or sequester carbon in alignment with global climate goals under the Paris Agreement, including plans for adapting to climate impacts.

  • A gaseous form of hydrocarbons consisting mainly of methane.

  • Chemicals found in nature that are used for cooling and heating, such as CO, ammonia, and some hydrocarbons. They have low GWPs and are ozone friendly, making them climate-friendly refrigerants.

  • The rate of primary production for photosynthetic organisms, excluding the carbon they respire for their own metabolic processes.

  • Microbial conversion of ammonia or ammonium to nitrite and then to nitrate under aerobic conditions.

  • A group of air pollutant molecules composed of nitrogen and oxygen, including NO and NO.

  • A greenhouse gas produced during fossil fuel combustion and agricultural and industrial processes. NO is hundreds of times more potent than CO at trapping atmospheric heat, and it depletes stratospheric ozone.

  • Metals or alloys that do not contain significant amounts of iron.

  • Social welfare organizations, civic leagues, social clubs, labor organizations, business associations, and other not-for-profit organizations.

  • A material or energy source that relies on resources that are finite or not naturally replenished at the rate of consumption, including fossil fuels like coal, oil, and natural gas.

  • nitrogen oxides

  • Net primary production

  • nitrous oxide

  • The process of increasing the acidity of seawater, primarily caused by absorption of CO from the atmosphere.

  • Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development

  • An agreement between a seller who will produce future goods and a purchaser who commits to buying them, often used as project financing for producers prior to manufacturing.

  • Waste made of plant or animal matter, including food waste and green waste.

  • Systems to connect buyers with a network of smallholder farmers to stabilize supply and demand (sometimes called "contract farming.”

  • organic waste

  • Protected area

  • Protected Area

  • A certification that verifies a metric ton of packaging waste has been recovered and is being exported for reprocessing.

  • A certification that verifies a metric ton of packaging waste has been recovered and reprocessed.

  • Productive use of wet or rewetted peatlands that does not disturb the peat layer, such as for hunting, gathering, and growing wetland-adapted crops for food, fiber, and energy.

  • A legally protected area that lacks effective enforcement or management, resulting in minimal to no conservation benefit.

  • Airborne particles composed of solids and liquids.

  • A measure of transporting one passenger over a distance of one kilometer.

  • Incentive payments to landowners or managers to conserve natural resources and promote healthy ecological functions or ecosystem services.

  • Small, hardened pieces of plastic made from cooled resin that can be melted to make new plastic products.

  • The longevity of any greenhouse gas emission reductions or removals. Solution impacts are considered permanent if the risk of reversing the positive climate impacts is low within 100 years.

  • Packaging waste export recovery note

  • Advanced solar cells combining perovskite and silicon layers to capture more of the solar spectrum, achieving higher efficiency than conventional silicon cells.

  • Payments for ecosystem services

  • A mixture of hydrocarbons, small amounts of other organic compounds, and trace amounts of metals used to produce products such as fuels or plastics.

  • Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, a class of synthetic chemicals that do not degrade easily in the environment. They can pollute the environment and can have negative impacts on human health.

  • A measure of the acidity (pH<7) or alkalinity (pH>7) of a solution.

  • Reduce the use of a material or practice over time.

  • Eliminate the use of a material or practice over time.

  • Plug-in hybrid electric car

  • Private, national, or multilateral organizations dedicated to providing aid through in-kind or financial donations.

  • An atmospheric reaction among sunlight, VOCs, and nitrogen oxide that leads to ground-level ozone formation. Ground-level ozone, a component of smog, harms human health and the environment.

  • The process by which certain materials, such as those in solar cells, convert sunlight into electricity by releasing electrons.

  • The process by which sunlight is converted into electricity. When light hits certain materials, such as those in solar panels, it mobilizes electrons, creating an electric current.

  • A family of synthetic organic compounds used to make plastics softer, more flexible, and durable. They are added to a wide range of plastics for consumer and industrial uses.

  • polyisocyanurate

  • The adjustment of turbine blade angles around their long axis in which a control system rotates blades slightly forward or backward to regulate wind capture and optimize electricity generation.

  • passenger kilometer

  • particulate matter

  • Particulate matter 2.5 micrometers or less in diameter that can harm human health when inhaled.

  • Elected officials and their staff, bureaucrats, civil servants, regulators, attorneys, and government affairs professionals.

  • System in a vehicle that generates power and delivers it to the wheels. It typically includes an engine and/or motor, transmission, driveshaft, and differential.

  • Purchase Power Agreements

  • Purchase Power Agreement.

  • People who most directly interface with a solution and/or determine whether the solution is used and/or available. 

  • A chemical reaction that creates a solid from a solution.

  • A substance that is the starting material for a chemical reaction that forms a different substance.

  • Extraction of naturally occurring resources from the Earth, including mining, logging, and oil and gas refining. These resources can be used in raw or minimally processed forms to produce materials.

  • The process of converting inorganic matter, including carbon dioxide, into organic matter (biomass), primarily by photosynthetic organisms such as plants and algae.

  • Packaging waste recovery note

  • Defined by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature as "A clearly defined geographical space, recognised, dedicated and managed, through legal or other effective means, to achieve the long-term conservation of nature with associated ecosystem services and cultural values". References to PAs here also include other effective area-based conservation measures defined by the IUCN. 

  • A process that separates and breaks down wood and other raw materials into fibers that form pulp, the base ingredient for making paper products.

  • polyurethane

  • Long-term contract between a company (the buyer) and a renewable energy producer (the seller).

  • Long-term contracts between a company (the buyer) and a renewable energy producer (the seller).

  • photovoltaic

  • research and development

  • A situation in which improvements in efficiency or savings lead to consumers increasing consumption, partially or fully offsetting or exceeding the emissions or cost benefits.

  • renewable energy certificate

  • Chemical or mixture used for cooling and heating in refrigeration, air conditioning, and heat pump equipment. Refrigerants absorb and release heat as they move between states under changing pressure.

  • The amount of refrigerant needed for a particular refrigeration, air conditioning, or heat pump system.

  • A group of approaches to farming and ranching that emphasizes enhancing the health of soil by restoring its carbon content and providing other benefits to the farm and surrounding ecosystem.

  • A solution that can increase the beneficial impact of another solution through increased effectiveness, lower costs, improved adoption, enhanced global climate impact, and/or other benefits to people and nature.

  • A material or energy source that relies on naturally occuring and replenishing resources such as plant matter, wind, or sunlight.

  • A market-based instrument that tracks ownership of renewable energy generation.

  • The moldable form of raw plastic material, created by melting down waste or virgin plastics and serving as the building block for creating new plastic goods.

  • The process of moving items from end users (e.g., consumers) back to the sellers or manufacturers to reuse, recycle, or dispose of. This can include transportation, cleaning, sorting, and more.

  • Hiring a vehicle to take a passenger or passengers to a particular destination.

  • U.N. treaties to combat climate change, biodiversity loss, and desertification. They include the U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), and the U.N. Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD).

  • A class of animals with complex stomachs that can digest grass. Most grazing livestock are ruminants including cows, sheep, and goats along with several other species.

  • sustainable aviation fuel

  • A wetland ecosystem regularly flooded by tides and containing salt-tolerant plants, such as grasses and herbs.

  • Intertidal coastal wetlands with salt-tolerant plants.

  • An ecosystem characterized by low-density tree cover that allows for a grass subcanopy.

  • Very large or small numbers are formatted in scientific notation. A positive exponent multiplies the number by powers of ten; a negative exponent divides the number by powers of ten.

  • Seasonal coefficient of performance

  • Sustainable Development Goals

  • Average units of heat energy released for every unit of electrical energy consumed, used to measure heat pump efficiency.

  • A single pane window (glass and frame) added to an existing single-glazed window, converting the unit into double glazing, with each pane independently operable.

  • A practice in which multiple utility companies own and operate high-voltage power lines, sharing both costs and benefits.

  • A window consisting of one glass pane without any additional insulating layers.

  • Small-scale family farmers and other food producers, often with limited resources, usually in the tropics. The average size of a smallholder farm is two hectares (about five acres).

  • soil organic carbon

  • The process of using direct, real-world observations to verify, validate, and/or improve data and models about social systems, often using in-person observations in the field.

  • Carbon stored in soils, including both organic (from decomposing plants and microbes) and inorganic (from carbonate-containing minerals).

  • Carbon stored in soils in organic forms (from decomposing plants and microbes). Soil organic carbon makes up roughly half of soil organic matter by weight.

  • Biologically derived matter in soils, including living, dead, and decayed plant and microbial tissues. Soil organic matter is roughly half carbon on a dry-weight basis.

  • Reducing global warming by increasing how much of the sun's radiation is reflected back to space and/or decreasing how much of the Earth's radiative heat is trapped in the atmosphere. 

  • A material's ability to reflect solar radiation incident on its surface, often reported as a fraction or percentage.

  • soil organic matter

  • A substance that takes up another liquid or gas substance, either by absorbtion or adsorption.

  • sulfur oxides

  • sulfur dioxide

  • The rate at which a climate solution physically affects the atmosphere after being deployed. At Project Drawdown, we use three categories: emergency brake (fastest impact), gradual, or delayed (slowest impact).

  • Climate regions between latitudes 23.4° to 35° above and below the equator characterized by warm summers and mild winters.

  • A polluting gas produced primarily from burning fossil fuels and industrial processes that directly harms the environment and human health.

  • A group of gases containing sulfur and oxygen that predominantly come from burning fossil fuels. They contribute to air pollution, acid rain, and respiratory health issues.

  • Processes, people, and resources involved in producing and delivering a product from supplier to end customer, including material acquisition.

  • Sport utility vehicle

  • A mixture of hydrogen, carbon monoxide, and other gases, used to produce chemicals like ammonia and methanol, or as a synthetic fuel made from non-fossil feedstocks, including biomass and waste.

  • metric ton

  • metric tons

  • Technology developers, including founders, designers, inventors, R&D staff, and creators seeking to overcome technical or practical challenges.

  • Climate regions between 35° to 50° above and below the equator characterized by moderate mean annual temperatures and distinct seasons, with warm summers and cold winters.

  • A measure of energy equivalent to the energy delivered by one trillion watts of power over one hour.

  • trifluoroacetic acid

  • trifluoroacetic acid

  • A measurement indicating the ability of a material to release heat after it has been absorbed.

  • A measure of how well a material prevents heat flow, often called R-value or RSI-value for insulation. A higher R-value means better thermal performance.

  • A measure of the rate of heat flow or heat transfer through a material or building component. A lower U-value means better thermal performance.

  • Individuals with an established audience for their work, including public figures, experts, journalists, and educators.

  • Charges for disposal of materials paid to facility operators. Fees can be charged per ton of waste disposed or based on economic indicators such as the Consumer Price Index.

  • A solar PV systems with panels that move automatically to follow the sun’s path, maximizing energy capture and improving efficiency over fixed systems.

  • A window consisting of three panes of glass separated by two insulating inert gas-filled layers, providing more heat flow resistance than single or double glazing.

  • Low-latitude (23.4°S to 23.4°N) climate regions near the Equator characterized by year-round high temperatures and distinct wet and dry seasons.

  • Terawatt, equal to 1,000 gigawatts

  • terawatt-hour

  • United Nations

  • United Nations Environment Programme

  • U.S. Composting Council

  • Self-propelled machine for transporting passengers or freight on roads.

  • A measure of one vehicle traveling a distance of one kilometer.

  • Aerobic decomposition of organic waste by earthworms and microorganisms.

  • vehicle kilometer

  • volatile organic compound

  • Gases made of organic, carbon-based molecules that are readily released into the air from other solid or liquid materials. Some VOCs are greenhouse gases or can harm human health.

  • watt (a measure of power or energy transfer.)

  • Watts per square meter Kelvin

  • A thin, flat slice of silicon cut from an ingot and processed to create individual solar cells that convert sunlight into electricity.

  • Landscape waste, storm debris, wood processing residues, and recovered post-consumer wood.

  • A framework for waste management that ranks options by their sustainability: 1) prevent (do not purchase unnecessary waste), 2) reduce, 3) reuse, 4) recycle, 5) recover, 6) dispose.

  • A measure of power equal to one joule per second.

  • World Conservation Monitoring Centre

  • Using strategies such as insulation, air sealing, ventilation, and moisture control to upgrade a building’s exterior structure, making indoors more comfortable and energy efficient.

  • Aerobic decomposition of organic waste in long, narrow rows called windrows. Windrows are generally twice as long as they are wide.

  • A subset of forest ecosystems that may have sparser canopy cover,  smaller-stature trees, and/or trees characterized by basal branching rather than a single main stem.

  • extruded polystyrene

  • The rotation of the nacelle (the enclosed housing at the top of a wind turbine tower that contains the main mechanical and electrical components of the turbine) so that the rotor blades are always facing directly into the wind.

  • year-over-year

  • year

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