Hydrogen-Based Decarbonisation Strategies for Residential Heating: An Energy Efficiency and Conservation Analysis in the North of Tyne Region

Mohamed Abuella, Adib Allahham*, Nabila Ahmed Rufa’I, Sara Louise Walker

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

This study examines hydrogen-based and alternative strategies for decarbonising residential heating in the North of Tyne (NoT) region, UK, focusing on energy efficiency and conservation. A multi-system-perspective framework integrating scenario analysis and quantitative energy-system modelling is applied to assess socio-technical interventions, technology pathways (heat pumps and hydrogen boilers), and hydrogen-blending levels up to 2050. Monte Carlo simulations and a game-theoretic investment model are used to evaluate energy demand, CO2 emissions, and system costs. The results show that socio-technical interventions substantially reduce energy demand but are insufficient alone to reach net zero. Hydrogen blending provides modest emission reductions, while full electrification via heat pumps is most cost-effective in the long term, particularly with carbon capture and storage (CCS). A hybrid 50/50 heat pump–hydrogen-boiler pathway with CCS post-2040 presents a practical transition option. The findings highlight the importance of coordinated infrastructure planning and societal engagement for achieving deep heating decarbonisation.
Original languageEnglish
Article number6237
Number of pages22
JournalEnergies
Volume18
Issue number23
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 27 Nov 2025

Keywords

  • carbon capture and storage
  • decarbonisation
  • energy efficiency
  • heat pumps
  • hydrogen
  • residential heating
  • socio-technical interventions

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