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There is a certain type of ambition that doesn’t go unnoticed. You start to realize that what’s being built here isn’t just infrastructure when you stand in the middle of Saudi Arabia’s sun-hammered Neom construction zone, where cranes move like slow giants against an endless blue sky. It’s a declaration. The Kingdom is making a huge, long-term wager that hydrogen, which is separated from water by sunlight, will be the world’s next great energy currency rather than crude oil that is pumped from underground.
The goal of Saudi Arabia’s hydrogen export strategy is to produce 1.2 million tonnes of green hydrogen annually by 2030. This figure is ambitious enough to raise eyebrows but precise enough to inspire confidence. The strategy is at the core of Vision 2030’s larger energy pivot, which calls for a net-zero emissions target pushed to 2060 and 50% of domestic electricity to come from renewable sources. The machinery is undoubtedly in motion, but whether those figures hold up under actual pressure is a different matter.
| Category | Details |
|---|---|
| Country | Saudi Arabia |
| Strategy Name | Vision 2030 Hydrogen Export Initiative |
| Annual Export Target (2030) | 1.2 million tonnes of green hydrogen |
| Key Projects | NEOM Green Hydrogen Co., Sudair Solar Plant, Yanbu 4GW Project |
| NEOM Project Scale | $500 billion joint venture; 650 tonnes/day production capacity by 2026 |
| Electrolyzer Capacity (NEOM) | 2.2 GW |
| Green Hydrogen Cost Estimate | $1–$2 per kilogram |
| Saudi-German Export Deal | 200,000 tonnes/year — ACWA Power & SEFE Energy (signed early 2025) |
| Key Partners | Air Products (US), ACWA Power, EnBW (Germany), Siemens, KAUST |
| Global Hydrogen Market (2030) | Projected $640 billion |
| Net-Zero Target | 2060 |
| Domestic Renewable Energy Goal | 50% electricity from renewables by 2030 |
| Water Challenge | ~9 kg of water needed per 1 kg of hydrogen produced |
| Stargate Hydrogen KSA | MoU with Saudi RDI; regional HQ in Riyadh; IP generation with KAUST |
| Saudi Arabia’s 2050 Ambition | Supply 10% of global hydrogen energy |
It is truly hard to dispute the nation’s geographic advantages. Saudi Arabia is one of the more likely candidates to produce green hydrogen at scale because of its vast, sun-drenched desert, reliable wind corridors along the Red Sea coast, and comparatively low financing costs. The Kingdom is far ahead of many of its European counterparts who are still struggling with much higher production costs, with cost estimates ranging from $1 to $2 per kilogram. By the middle of the century, the global hydrogen economy is expected to grow to $700 billion, and Saudi planners seem to think that their nation should be claiming a significant portion of it.
The reality of infrastructure is beginning to emerge. With 2.2 gigawatts of electrolyzer capacity, NEOM Green Hydrogen Co. is a joint venture that aims to produce 650 tonnes of green hydrogen per day by 2026. It is arguably the project receiving the most international attention.

Approximately 2.9 million tonnes of carbon emissions are offset annually by ACWA Power’s Sudair solar plant, which produces 1,500 megawatts of clean energy. These are not pilot initiatives. These are large-scale commitments, and witnessing their progress gives the entire plan a level of legitimacy that it might not have on paper alone.
Early in 2025, ACWA Power and Germany’s SEFE Energy signed a bilateral agreement for Saudi Arabia and Germany to export 200,000 tonnes of green hydrogen per year by 2030. The agreement has significant strategic importance. Since decades of reliance were upset by the Russia-Ukraine conflict, Germany has been frantically trying to diversify its energy imports; agreements with Brazil and Norway show how seriously Berlin is taking this transition. The fact that Saudi Arabia was able to establish one of these early alliances indicates that the Kingdom is making a good impression.
There is also the more subdued, technical aspect of the narrative. The Research, Development, and Innovation Authority of Saudi Arabia and the European company Stargate Hydrogen signed a Memorandum of Understanding that established a regional headquarters in Riyadh with the goal of developing domestic intellectual property and localizing electrolyzer technology, partially in cooperation with KAUST. This type of agreement is crucial for long-term competitiveness even though it doesn’t make many front pages. A nation that only imports hydrogen technology will always be dependent; a nation that develops it domestically is in a completely different position.
However, there’s a chance that the time between announcement and implementation could be painful. The water issue is genuine and difficult to ignore, and green hydrogen is still costly without significant carbon pricing to level the playing field. About nine kilograms of water are needed to produce one kilogram of hydrogen, which is a sobering statistic for an area where freshwater resources are already scarce. Although there are early-stage solutions involving seawater electrolysis, and Gulf states may have a legitimate incentive to take the lead in that field, the problem remains unresolved.
The Gulf Cooperation Council countries, which collectively produce about 20% of the world’s oil, are warming up at a rate that is three times faster than that of cities like London. Scientists are forecasting temperatures that could be fatal. Observing this hydrogen push from the outside gives the impression that the urgency is genuine rather than merely theatrical. In a significant sense, the area is constructing escape routes from a future that its own fossil fuel wealth contributed to. As much as anything Saudi engineers build in the desert, global carbon policy may determine whether hydrogen turns out to be the clean bridge it promises to be or just another costly fantasy that fails to live up to expectations.
There is ambition. The geography is useful. The agreements are being signed. Whether the rate of demand from Europe, East Asia, and other regions will keep up with the size of what the Kingdom is getting ready to supply is still genuinely uncertain.









