1 Department of Environmental Sciences, Indiana University Bloomington, United States.
2 Department of Geology, Ladoke Akintola University of Technology, Nigeria.
3 Department of Mechanical Engineering, Akwa Ibom State University, Nigeria.
4 Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Ilorin, Nigeria.
5 Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Benin, Nigeria.
6 Marshall School of Business, University of Southern California, United States.
World Journal of Advanced Engineering Technology and Sciences, 2025, 16(02), 093–111
Article DOI: 10.30574/wjaets.2025.16.2.1265
Received on 27 June 2025; revised on 05 August 2025; accepted on 07 August 2025
Hard-to-abate industrial sectors like steel, cement, chemicals, and petroleum refining sectors account for 30% of CO₂ emissions worldwide, thereby challenging climate ambitions. This review paper critically assesses the contribution of hybrid renewable-hydrogen systems and technology architectures integrating renewable energy sources such as solar, wind, hydro, geothermal energy systems, coulpled with hydrogen generation and storage, in facilitating deep decarbonization of these industries. Evidence from flagship projects like Shell's 10 MW Refhyne project and Sweden's H2 Green Steel illustrates emission reductions of 95% using integrated wind-solar-electrolyzer systems. Modelled research indicates that hybrid systems can be cost-competitive with a levelized cost of hydrogen (LCOH) under $2/kg by 2030, rendering green hydrogen economically viable. The review synthesizes more than 10 case studies and 15 techno-economic models with a focus on system architectures, energy flows, electrolyzer utilization, and sectoral applications. Challenges such as high capital intensity, intermittency, and regulatory gaps are also discussed, with strategic suggestions for scaling deployment through hydrogen hubs, AI-driven control systems, and next-generation electrolyzer technologies. Hybrid renewable-hydrogen systems overall, offer a promising solution to minimize emissions, increase industrial resilience, and meet energy transition goals concurrently.
Green Hydrogen; Hybrid Renewable Energy; Industrial Decarbonization; Electrolyzer Integration; Levelized Cost of Hydrogen (LCOH)