Australia and Japanese Engineers Collaborate on Renewable Hydrogen

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Australia and Japan’s joint technological expertise can lead the way in international clean energy, according to a joint report focussing on hydrogen, released this week.

This partnership will lead to new jobs, cleaner industry, and economic benefits for both nations. The Australian Academy of Technological Sciences and Engineering (ATSE) and The Engineering Academy of Japan (EAJ), led by its Emerging Research Leaders Exchange Programme (ERLEP), launched their joint report, The Australia-Japan Renewable Hydrogen Value Chain, at an event today in Osaka during World Expo 2025.

The report outlines hydrogen’s emerging role as a clean fuel with potential across two nations’ economies – in construction, manufacturing, agriculture and fertilisers, and chemical production. It articulates the steps necessary to most expediently produce, transport, store, and use millions of tonnes of green hydrogen across Australia and Japan.

Fuelled by abundant and cheap Australian renewable energy using technologies leveraging Japanese and Australian inventions, green hydrogen is primed to become a critical industry and trade focus in the Asia-Pacific by 2050. Acting as a carrier of energy and a clean, highly useful chemical input, green hydrogen can also set up other sectors for success, including steelmaking and fertiliser manufacturing.

“Achieving this potential requires a sustained focus on skills, infrastructure and financing,” said ATSE CEO Kylie Walker. “Japanese and Australian innovation, working together in partnership, are a force to be reckoned with. Today’s report lays out how retrained personnel from existing energy industries could add to their existing knowledge and fill the critical hydrogen roles of the future.”

“Japan and Australia are perfect partners for exploring the complementarity and synergy in their expertise in renewable hydrogen,” said EAJ Chair of International Affairs Yuko Harayama. “The key would be to bring together stakeholders from industry and academia from both sides.”

The hydrogen industry is global, and so are the technological collaborations that will grow this new field. This report sets a gold standard on best-practice regional collaboration, opening the doors for future cooperation, research and technology development.

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