In the Meantime, Oil Majors Are Behaving Strangely... Here's something I never thought we'd see... Oil and gas major Chevron (NYSE: CVX) intends to be a leader in clean energy! Five years ago, Chevron management probably considered "clean energy" offensive language. Now the company is embracing it. This oil giant isn't alone, of course... I have been watching with amazement as all of the oil and gas majors have unveiled plans to go green. Royal Dutch Shell (NYSE: RDS-A), for example, plans to invest tens of billions of dollars to generate revenue from electric car charging, carbon capture and storage, and electricity sales. What I find fascinating about Chevron's plan is that the company sees "green hydrogen" as playing a big role in its future. Green hydrogen is created with electrolyzers that convert water into hydrogen by using renewable energy from solar power and other sources. Blue and gray hydrogen come from fossil fuels. From what I've been reading, it looks like green hydrogen has a big future. As a clean energy source, green hydrogen has one huge advantage over wind and solar power. It isn't intermittent. The sun isn't always shining, and the wind isn't always blowing. And battery storage for wind and solar requires massive batteries that aren't great fits for long-distance transportation. Green hydrogen, meanwhile, doesn't need batteries. Therefore, green hydrogen makes sense as a fuel source for long-distance trucking, aircraft and cargo ships. Bank of America (NYSE: BAC) believes that green hydrogen is going to be an $11 trillion market by 2050. Bloomberg New Energy Finance has reported that there are already more than $90 billion worth of green hydrogen projects in the global pipeline. Those are some eye-popping numbers. The dollars involved here make green hydrogen a market that I will be paying attention to in search of investment opportunities. If I find one, you will be the first to know. Good investing, Jody |
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