OVERKILL
$100 Site Donor 2021
GE has a hydrogen calculator:
https://www.gevernova.com/gas-power...rogen-fueled-gas-turbines/hydrogen-calculator
Which lets you select a turbine model, how much hydrogen is used as the fuel (which is otherwise natural gas) and then gives you the power required to produce the hydrogen and the volume of hydrogen the turbine would use at your selected feed percentage.
For fun, I chose a CCGT pair of LMS100 PB+ turbines, which produce 258.5MWe in CCGT mode (two turbines plus a Rankine steam heat recovery stage):
To feed these puppies requires 149.2 million cubic feet of hydrogen per day; 6.22 million cubic feet of hydrogen per hour.
To generate that hydrogen requires 910MW of input electricity.
So, to generate enough hydrogen to produce 258.5MW of electricity from a pair of CCGT's (the most efficient GT) turbines, it requires 910MW of electricity.
They also give you the "wind turbine" equivalent, which is 1,821MW of wind turbines, which is a wild 50% capacity factor!
You could have all kinds of fun with this math, calculate how much solar you'd need to provide 258.5MW around the clock, running the GT's after the sun goes down and all night and having enough solar to generate all that hydrogen, plus provide the 258.5WM during the day, instead of using wind, that buggers off for weeks at a time.
https://www.gevernova.com/gas-power...rogen-fueled-gas-turbines/hydrogen-calculator
Which lets you select a turbine model, how much hydrogen is used as the fuel (which is otherwise natural gas) and then gives you the power required to produce the hydrogen and the volume of hydrogen the turbine would use at your selected feed percentage.
For fun, I chose a CCGT pair of LMS100 PB+ turbines, which produce 258.5MWe in CCGT mode (two turbines plus a Rankine steam heat recovery stage):
To feed these puppies requires 149.2 million cubic feet of hydrogen per day; 6.22 million cubic feet of hydrogen per hour.
To generate that hydrogen requires 910MW of input electricity.
So, to generate enough hydrogen to produce 258.5MW of electricity from a pair of CCGT's (the most efficient GT) turbines, it requires 910MW of electricity.
They also give you the "wind turbine" equivalent, which is 1,821MW of wind turbines, which is a wild 50% capacity factor!
You could have all kinds of fun with this math, calculate how much solar you'd need to provide 258.5MW around the clock, running the GT's after the sun goes down and all night and having enough solar to generate all that hydrogen, plus provide the 258.5WM during the day, instead of using wind, that buggers off for weeks at a time.