This Annex presents six case studies of pilot hydrogen production projects in Central Asia. Of these, four are located in Mongolia, with one in Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan respectively. The information provided in this Annex has been provided by the project developers through a questionnaire, and where possible supplemented by additional publicly available information. The OECD Sustainable Infrastructure Programme in Asia (SIPA) is very grateful to the project developers for their willingness to engage in this exercise, and for their thoroughness and openness with the information provided. The case studies presented in this Annex are for informational purposes only and the information presented here was up to date as of September 2024.
While it is not the purpose of this Annex to be analytical, a number of themes are worth highlighting for context. The first is that although all the pilot projects aim ultimately to export hydrogen or a hydrogen derivative, they are primarily structured in two parts, with the first part of the pilot focused on securing a domestic off-taker for demonstration and feasibility purposes; almost all the projects recognise that securing finance for a competitive export-oriented development strategy will be contingent in the first instance on demonstrating the technical and economic viability of low-carbon technologies in the domestic market.
The second is that there are a number of key technical and financial parameters missing from the case studies, which reflects the fact that while these pilot projects are ambitious, they generally remain in an early stage of development. The third is that, under appropriate policy conditions, all the pilot project developers are confident that they would be able to produce renewable hydrogen in the 2-3 USD/Kg range that the IEA and OECD consider necessary for the fuel to be competitive in hard-to-abate industries. The fourth and last item is that, in the cases of the Mongolian pilot projects, developers are targeting both the same export market and, more challenging, the same domestic industrial market.

