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A clean energy source may be lurking beneath mountain ranges

As the search for geologic hydrogen - a potential clean source of energy beneath the ground - continues, some researchers are turning to mountains
Is there hydrogen to be found beneath the Grisons mountains in Switzerland?
Thomas Stoiber / Alamy

Mountain ranges could be a potential source of clean energy in the form of as-yet untapped hydrogen. While previous research has suggested this 鈥済eologic鈥 hydrogen could be found underground, researchers have only recently turned to mountains as a possible store.

鈥淐ertain minerals react with water and can generate hydrogen like a free green energy source,鈥 says at the Helmholtz Centre for Geosciences in Germany.

There are vast amounts of such minerals on Earth, but they are mainly found deep below the surface in a layer known as the mantle, he says, where they don鈥檛 come into contact with water. But during the formation and uplift of mountain ranges, some mantle rock can be brought close to the surface, where it can react with water in a process called serpentinisation.

To get an idea of the potential for hydrogen formation, Zwaan and his colleagues modelled the uplift process, looking at how much mantle material reaches areas where there are optimum temperatures and enough circulating water for this to occur. Their results support the idea that under mountain ranges.

Serpentinisation also occurs at mid-ocean ridges 鈥 some think it drove the origin of life 鈥 but hydrogen formed there is unlikely to be trapped, says Zwaan.聽 That is because the temperature is lower than 122掳C (252掳F), and any trapped hydrogen will be 鈥渆aten鈥 by bacteria, but under mountains it is possible to drill down to where the temperature is higher.

鈥淣othing wants to live there, so it鈥檚 perfect for the hydrogen to be preserved,鈥 Zwaan told a meeting of the European Geosciences Union in Vienna last week. 鈥淎nd there might even be another option, to drill into what you can call the hydrogen kitchen 鈥 the area where the hydrogen is generated.鈥

The model results are supported by early findings from studies of some mountain ranges. For instance, at the University of Strasbourg, France, has confirmed there is hydrogen production under the Grisons area of the Alps in Switzerland. But how much there is remains to be seen, he told the meeting. 鈥淥ur research is just at the very beginning,鈥 he said.

There is also hydrogen seeping up from below the northern Pyrenees, reported at the University of Toulouse, France. This research, too, is at an early stage.

Reference

EGU General Assembly 2025

Topics: Energy and fuels / Hydrogen power