Eurograd message

Message posted on 11/03/2025

REMINDER: CfA "Hydrogen pasts, presents and futures"

                Dear List Subscribers,

This is a reminder about the upcoming deadline for submitting abstracts for a
Special Issue of the FUTURES JOURNAL on "Hydrogen Pasts, Presents, and
Futures."

Guest editors: Kornelia Konrad, University of Twente; Michael Kriechbaum,
University of Graz; Filip Rozborski, Maastricht University; Andreas Weber,
University of Twente

Special issue information: The Paris Agreement requires a profound
transformation of energy systems and their climate impact. This includes
drastic reductions of carbon dioxide emission not only within sectors in which
multiple solutions exist but also within sectors considered hard to abate,
such as the chemical or steel industry. Not the least with a view on these
sectors, hydrogen has been rediscovered and is experiencing unprecedented
levels of societal attention as a versatile energy carrier that is expected to
complement electrification efforts and link various sectors, including
electricity, transportation, industry, and buildings. Corresponding to these
rising expectations, more than 60 countries have published hydrogen strategies
and roadmaps as of May 2024 (Corbeau & Kaswiyanto, 2024), formulating their
specific visions of a hydrogen economy. Moreover, there has been exponential
growth in public and private investments and a surge of large-scale hydrogen
projects worldwide (IEA, 2023). Particularly important in many current
concepts is the vision of a global hydrogen economy, connecting hydrogen
exporting and importing countries, often following present and past resource
flows between Global South and Global North countries.
While the intensity of the current hydrogen hype and scale of investments are
unprecedented, the vision of hydrogen as an energy carrier has a long past.
Initial technologies for creating and using hydrogen were already invented in
the 19th century, and multiple waves of enthusiasm occurred throughout the
20th and early 21st century, connected to different societal hopes such as
energy independence, democratisation and technological progress (Hacking et
al. 2019; Yap & McLellan, 2023; Budde & Konrad, 2019; Bakker & Budde, 2012;
Sovacool and Brossmann, 2010). However, the concrete visions and expectations
with regard to both hydrogen production and use changed drastically over time,
for instance from a focus on hydrogen cars and stationary fuel cells in
buildings around the turn of the millennium to the current strong hopes on
green hydrogen for the steel and chemical sectors, reflecting the changing
concerns of their times.
Scholars in the futures field have explored various aspects of hydrogen
futures. They have scrutinized past dynamics of hydrogen futures (e.g., Ruef &
Markard, 2010; Bakker & Budde, 2012; Konrad et al., 2012), but also their
relatively high resilience (Sovacool and Brossmann, 2010; Eames et al., 2006).
While studies within previous waves of interest have focused on dynamics of
hydrogen future discourses, current research calls for examining the
relationship between hydrogen futures and hydrogen pasts (Hollenhorst, 2023),
as well as established imaginaries regarding social order and energy
transformation (e.g., Hanusch & Schad, 2021; Virens, 2024; de Leeuw & Vogl,
2024; Dorn, 2024; Beasy, 2022). Additionally, other scholars have pointed to
the importance of spatial differences and materialities of hydrogen futures
(Hine, Gibbson & Carr, 2024; Trencher & van der Hijden, 2019), and underlined
how global hydrogen futures are shaped by power structures and global
North-South dynamics (Kalt & Tunn, 2022; Rodhouse et al., 2024; Flavdad,
2020).
The envisaged Special Issue welcomes contributions investigating present and
past hydrogen futures, their context of emergence, their performativity, and
the relation between both. We also welcome contributors who tackle specific
hydrogen-related projects, policies, research and innovation activities and
how a transition to green hydrogen may impact various regions and sectors.
Contributors are invited to pay particular attention to how hydrogen visions,
expectations and imaginaries relate to (hydrogen) pasts, presents, and
futures. For instance, how are present hydrogen futures formed and carried by
(if not stuck in) present concerns? How are they simultaneously shaped by
the specific pasts of places, social groups, sectors and knowledge fields? To
what extend do they relate to and reflect past hydrogen futures? How do
emerging material and socio-political structures co-produce global and local
energy futures? How do hydrogen visions relate to histories of colonialism and
extraction?

Deadlines and submission instructions

  *   All details:
https://www.sciencedirect.com/special-issue/319923/hydrogen-pasts-presents-an
d-futures
  *   Please submit expressions of interest in the form of an abstract
(300-400 words) by email to Kornelia Konrad
(k.e.konrad@utwente.nl), Michael Kriechbaum
(michael.kriechbaum@uni-graz.at), Filip
Rozborski
(filip.rozborski@maastrichtuniversity.nl) and Andreas Weber (a.weber@utwente.nl)
by March 15, 2025. If you are struggling to meet the deadline, please contact
us for assistance.
  *   Acceptance of abstracts will be communicated in April.
  *   Manuscripts may be submitted to Futures starting 1 June 2025. Deadline
for submission of papers is 1 December 2025. Submissions before the deadline
will enter the review process earlier.
  *   Individual papers will be published online first as soon as they are
accepted and ready for publication.
  *   The expected publishing date of the Special Issue is approximately
September / October 2026.
  *   Please read the guidance to
authors before submitting
(http://www.elsevier.com/journals/futures/0016-3287/guide-for-authors)


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