Hydrogen, Ammonia, Methanol Training Courses > Green Hydrogen and Power to Fuels (PtX) – Business and Deployment Factors for Clean Hydrogen & Fuels from Renewables
Code Date Format Currency Team of 10
Per Person*
Team of 7
Per Person*
Early Bird Fee
Per Person
Normal Fee
Per Person
PWR1407 27 - 30 Oct 2026 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia SGD 4,729 4,949 5,299 5,499
PWR1407 27 - 30 Oct 2026 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia USD 3,697 3,869 4,099 4,299

*Fee per person in a team of 7 or 10 participating from the same organisation, registering 6 weeks before the course date
Request for a quote if you have different team sizes, content customisation, alternative dates or course timing requirements
Request for in-person classroom training or online (VILT) training format

Learn in teams and save more! Enjoy group discounts of up to 50% off normal fees for team based learning. Contact us on [email protected] to learn more today!

Code

PWR1407

Date

27 - 30 Oct 2026

Format

Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

Currency

SGD

Team of 10
Per Person*

4,729

Team of 7
Per Person*

4,949

Early Bird Fee
Per Person

5,299

Normal Fee
Per Person

5,499

Code

PWR1407

Date

27 - 30 Oct 2026

Format

Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

Currency

USD

Team of 10
Per Person*

3,697

Team of 7
Per Person*

3,869

Early Bird Fee
Per Person

4,099

Normal Fee
Per Person

4,299

*Fee per person in a team of 7 or 10 participating from the same organisation, registering 6 weeks before the course date
Request for a quote if you have different team sizes, content customisation, alternative dates or course timing requirements
Request for in-person classroom training or online (VILT) training format

About this Training Course

This 4-day course is intended for those seeking a comprehensive explanation of the key factors which will determine the viability and business case for green hydrogen and ‘power-to-fuel’ (PtX) projects: i.e. hydrogen production by electrolysis using renewable power, plus derivatives from this, including ammonia, methanol and e-fuels.

The course content has been developed to provide a clearly explained, business-focused and independent perspective on such projects. It will provide explanations of key technologies and components, doing so in a manner which is easily accessible and relevant to non-technical job functions, including a variety of commercial and business-focused roles.

Furthermore, the course will integrate this knowledge with consideration of practical deployment, financial and market demand factors; all of which must come together to create a viable business case.

It will thus give technology, product or project developers a much more rounded and market-focused context in which to understand and develop their products; or finance and policy-focused attendees a good understanding of where key project risks lie.

Upon completion of this course, the participants will be able to:

  • Gain a clear understanding of the components and infrastructures that make a green hydrogen and/or PtX project
  • Quantify the key inputs into hydrogen production, including capacity vs. output, consumables, efficiencies and economics metrics
  • Examine how factors such as clean hydrogen definitions and resource variability will influence project design choices
  • Understand the importance of key project interfaces, including power purchase agreements and hydrogen/e-fuel offtake contracts
  • Analyse the role of both electricity and hydrogen storage in mitigating the challenges presented by variable renewable power sources and ‘off-grid’ projects
  • Discuss how multiple factors feed into project risk analysis and will determine levels of investment return
  • Learn key lessons from project examples and business strategies around the world
  • Examine the outputs from green hydrogen project financial modelling
  • Review an up-to-date picture of policy influences and market demand factors which are determining the viability of green hydrogen and PtX projects across the globe

The course is intended for:

  • Project developers and investors in green hydrogen and PtX
  • Engineers and managers needing business insight into electrolysis and renewable integration
  • Policymakers and regulators shaping hydrogen and clean fuel markets
  • Corporate strategists and advisors exploring low-carbon energy opportunities
  • Financial analysts assessing costs, risks, and returns of hydrogen projects
  • Industrial end-users and off-takers considering clean hydrogen or synthetic fuels
  • Intermediate

The course will combine expert-led presentations with practical case studies, interactive discussions, and guided exercises. Participants will work through real-world data, financial models, and project examples to connect technical fundamentals with economic and policy considerations. Emphasis is placed on applied learning to equip attendees with tools directly transferable to green hydrogen and PtX project development.

Your expert course faculty is an internationally renowned, fully-independent energy communicator and business educator who has been working in evolving energy and power systems analysis for over twenty years. He has a particular focus on the commercial opportunities and risks created by transitioning energy systems towards cleaner energy supply.

In addition to his independent analysis, consulting and advisory work, he has trained in over thirty countries across five continents on a variety of energy system topics – including renewable power, energy storage, grid systems, electrification, clean fuels and energy security. Training clients have ranged all the way from small, product-focused startups to the world’s largest energy companies.

Regardless of their size, his work is valued by clients for its ‘hype-free’ and independent content, its constantly updated market relevance, and its core approach of creating business and commercial relevance – by integrating clear, data-backed explanations of relevant technology with economic, financial, market competition and practical deployment factors.

Prior to going independent, your expert course faculty was Research Director for over ten years at Informa, a now >$10 billion business intelligence provider. There, he drove new market identification, analysis and project deployment work, and managed teams in the UK and US.

He has an exemplary academic science background, holding a 1st Class honours degree in Natural Sciences from the University of Cambridge (UK), followed by a PhD in Earth Sciences, and a further Diploma in Economics & Sustainability.

Unlock the potential of your workforce with customized in-house training programs designed specifically for the energy sector. Our tailored, in-house courses not only enhance employee skills and engagement but also offer significant cost savings by eliminating travel expenses. Invest in your team’s success and achieve specific outcomes aligned with your organization’s goals through our expert training solutions. Request for further information regarding our on-site or in-house training opportunities.

In our ongoing commitment to sustainability and environmental responsibility, we will no longer providing hard copy training materials. Instead, all training content and resources will be delivered in digital format. Inspired by the oil and energy industry’s best practices, we are leveraging on digital technologies to reduce waste, lower our carbon emissions, ensuring our training content is always up-to-date and accessible. Click here to learn more.

To further optimise your learning experience from our courses, we also offer individualized “One to One” coaching support for 2 hours post training. We can help improve your competence in your chosen area of interest, based on your learning needs and available hours. This is a great opportunity to improve your capability and confidence in a particular area of expertise. It will be delivered over a secure video conference call by one of our senior trainers. They will work with you to create a tailor-made coaching program that will help you achieve your goals faster.
Request for further information post training support and fees applicable

Q1: What is green hydrogen and why is it important?

Green hydrogen is hydrogen produced via electrolysis using renewable electricity such as wind or solar. Unlike grey hydrogen (from natural gas) or blue hydrogen (with carbon capture), green hydrogen is near-zero carbon and a key enabler of global decarbonization. It supports sectors that are hard to electrify, such as steelmaking, shipping, and aviation. Its importance lies in reducing fossil fuel dependence, enabling large-scale energy storage, and producing clean fuels and chemicals through Power-to-X (PtX) processes.

Q2: What is Power-to-X (PtX) and how does it work?

Power-to-X (PtX) refers to technologies that convert renewable electricity into fuels, chemicals, or other energy carriers. The first step is producing green hydrogen via electrolysis, which is then used to create products such as green ammonia (via Haber-Bosch), green methanol, synthetic methane, or e-fuels like sustainable aviation fuel. PtX plays a critical role in decarbonizing heavy industry and transport while providing seasonal energy storage solutions.

Q3: How is the cost of green hydrogen calculated?

The main metric is Levelized Cost of Hydrogen (LCOH), which includes electrolyzer capex, balance-of-plant costs, electricity prices, operating costs, and utilization rates. Sensitivity analysis is used to see how factors such as power price, capacity factor, or electrolyzer efficiency affect costs. Co-product revenues (e.g., oxygen, heat) can help offset costs. Forecasts expect LCOH to fall with cheaper renewable power, larger-scale electrolysis, and technology learning curves.

Q4: What are the main challenges in scaling green hydrogen and PtX projects?

Key challenges include high upfront capital costs, renewable power availability and variability, water sourcing, infrastructure for storage and transport, and downstream demand readiness. Policy uncertainty and the lack of globally harmonized certification schemes also affect investor confidence. Successful projects integrate power purchase agreements (PPAs), offtake contracts, and storage solutions to manage risk and improve bankability.

Q5: How do renewable energy and storage affect project economics?

Renewable power is the single largest cost driver for green hydrogen projects. Variability in solar or wind output affects electrolyzer utilization, which impacts LCOH. Developers model trade-offs between oversizing renewable capacity, flexible electrolyzer operation, and integrating electricity or hydrogen storage. The choice between storing power before electrolysis or storing hydrogen afterward depends on project economics, grid access, and downstream customer requirements.

Q6: What trends and policies are shaping the future of green hydrogen and PtX?

Key trends include falling electrolyzer costs, growth of corporate PPAs for hydrogen, hybrid projects combining multiple renewable sources, and development of global hydrogen trade corridors. Policies such as the U.S. Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) tax credits, EU hydrogen auctions, and schemes like H2Global are accelerating deployment. Certification standards and guarantees of origin will be crucial for market transparency and international trade.

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