Skip to main content

Policies

POLICY work
unido-leaf-img

Our Mission in this field

We are dedicated to delivering a just hydrogen transition through the creation of an enabling framework environment for the acceleration of green and low-carbon hydrogen projects.

UNIDO recognizes the net-zero industrial development potential that hydrogen, and more specifically green hydrogen (GH2), offers developing countries with abundant renewable power potential. It can pave the way for job creation, skills upgrading, investment mobilization, energy security, and participation in global hydrogen trade. Green hydrogen can reinforce countries' overall resilience and drive a diversified and knowledge-based economy.

To reap the maximum benefit from this new opportunity presented by hydrogen, a significant alignment of strategies is needed (e.g. energy, industrial, education, investment, and national development). Building a hydrogen ecosystem is replete with challenges with respect to the absence of a domestic green hydrogen market, standards, costs, technology, and the necessary infrastructure for trade. Policy measures can be used to influence these to deliver on the objectives set out in the hydrogen strategy. In addition, with the large number of stakeholders involved, policy coordination among the stakeholders is key, but unfortunately often neglected.

UNIDO’s Global Programme for Hydrogen in Industry aims to support hydrogen strategy and policy designs to provide an integrated approach to the development of a hydrogen industry. Through the development of a hydrogen strategy, UNIDO supports countries in articulating their priorities for hydrogen development, identifying key development objectives and the strategic direction they will take to achieve these. The strategy should help make strategic decisions on allocating resources, prioritising actions and guiding activities towards achieving specific outcomes.

Once the strategy is set, UNIDO also supports policy designs by identifying sets of measures and means, which will enable the achievement of key development objectives defined in the strategy. To achieve the objectives specified in the hydrogen strategy, the Programme focuses on the “how and what” questions related to investment/skills/regulations, etc.  

In this focus area, UNIDO provides support on the global as well as regional & national levels:

Our policy work at the global level seeks to keep our member states abreast of global developments and discussions. We therefore:

  • Monitor trends in national hydrogen strategies
  • Advocate for just GH2 transition in global forums
  • Develop knowledge products to gather evidence for hydrogen strategy designs
  • Develop a policy toolkit with policy instruments to address the challenges and bottlenecks
    hindering the creation of a hydrogen ecosystem

Upon receiving requests for regional or national level interventions, UNIDO tailors and adapts its global tools to the specific circumstances and realities of the country or region to deliver, either as an advisor or as the main responsible:

  • Sensitization seminars
  • Facilitation workshops towards defining a GH2 vision
  • GH2 strategy and policy design
  • Stakeholder coordination

Highlights

Advanced Filter
21 November 2022 News
Industrial policy for the energy transition
VIENNA, 21 November 2022 – During the fiftieth session of the United Nations Industrial Development Organization’s Industrial Development Board (IDB), guest speakers addressed representatives of Member States at a special event, Industrial Policy for the Energy Transition.The session focused on two key questions: First, how can industrial policy be used as a tool to maximize the gains from the energy transition and minimize the risks? And second, what sorts of industrial policy cooperation and coordination across countries are necessary to achieve global targets?In his introductory remarks, UNIDO Director General, Gerd Müller, who had just returned from the COP27 in Sharm El-Sheikh, declared that a just and clean energy transition is an imperative for addressing climate change. He also stressed the need to decouple economic growth from greenhouse gas emissions, indicating that to achieve this “we need to use all relevant technologies”.Müller said that a massive investment in renewable energy is required to drive sustainable industrial development and highlighted the potential of green hydrogen as the future fuel. While countries in Africa, Latin America and Asia have great opportunities to develop green hydrogen production, UNIDO’s key message is “value creation must be kept in the producing countries for investment in industrialization”. He added, “We must create green hydrogen trade corridors and fair value chains between the developing market economies and the industrialized countries.”Rafael Grossi, Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), described the interlinkages between energy planning and industrial policy, with a focus on the role of nuclear energy and what it means for international development. He said, “We need to create the necessary tools in action so that the [energy] transition is virtuous. Nuclear energy accounts for twenty-five percent of the clean energy produced today worldwide.” He noted the importance of capacity building and instruments to help countries prepare for various technologies.  Christina Duarte, Special Adviser on Africa to the United Nations Secretary-General, highlighted that energy access is essential to accelerate economic transformation and industrialization in Africa. She emphasized opportunities for the development of continent-wide value chains, particularly in view of the critical mineral assets that the continent sits on and that are essential for the energy transition. She added that “it would be impossible for Africa to compete in international markets without affordable and accessible energy”.The keynote speaker, Jeffrey D. Sachs, Director, Centre for Sustainable Development at Columbia University, assessed the interplay of industrial policy and energy systems in time of transition. He argued that roadmaps are the most important tool that countries should have, adding that currently there is a lack of clarity on how countries plan to reach net zero. Sachs stressed that “governments need to plan with a 25-year horizon and they need to plan with their neighbours”.In the subsequent discussion, ambassadorial-level officials from the regional groups, including Europe, Latin America, Africa and Asia, contributed their ideas about the major challenges and opportunities from the energy transition for industrial development.Rana Ghoneim, UNIDO’s chief of the Energy Systems and Industrial Decarbonization Unit, who moderated the discussion, concluded by emphasizing the need for integrated policymaking to tackle our climate and development challenges. She also called on Member States to share lessons learned and best practices from their own transition.