The Research England Hydrogen Innovation Project is supporting a 12-month study (starting November 2025) on the evaluation of hydrogen storage in pipelines. Delivered in collaboration with Third Energy (CeraPhi), Crondall Energy and Nifepoint, the project explores the potential of repurposing decommissioned gas pipelines for safe, efficient and economically viable hydrogen storage. With industrial and academic expertise, the project bridges cutting-edge research with real-world application to accelerate the UK’s transition to a hydrogen economy.
Hydrogen storage in decommissioned offshore pipelines presents significant technical and economic barriers. Materials must withstand cyclic compression and decompression pressures, with potential issues of strength, compatibility and safety. Unlike traditional compressed air energy storage systems, hydrogen introduces new thermos-fluidic complexities as it functions as a fuel rather than an oxidiser. Alongside technical design, the project must evaluate technoeconomic feasibility, round-trip efficiency, and the commercial viability of pipeline-based hydrogen storage solutions under varying operational conditions.
Under the Power-to-Gas and Gas-to-Power theme, this project investigates optimal system configurations that maximise efficiency and storage capacity. The research involves:
This project will generate evidence-based insights to guide the development of hydrogen storage infrastructure in the UK. Outcomes will: