Skip to content Skip to Search
Skip navigation

Abu Dhabi signs hydrogen transport deal with Shenzhen

Abu Dhabi Shenzhen City, Architecture, Building
The deal with Shenzhen is the latest example of Abu Dhabi turning to China to seek expertise in growing its economy
  • Hydrogen power for buses and cars by 2025
  • Collaboration on sustainability and tech
  • UAE and China trade up by 37%

Abu Dhabi has signed a partnership with Shenzhen, one of the largest cities in China, to develop a green hydrogen complex to power buses and cars by 2025. 

The deal will look at collaboration on projects including green mobility, technology, autonomous solutions, sustainability and urban development, officials said.

The agreement was signed by Mohamed Ali Al Shorafa, chairman of Abu Dhabi’s Department of Municipalities and Transport (DMT), and Qin Weizhong, mayor of Shenzhen, during an inaugural innovation forum last month.

Shenzhen, which posted a 5 percent increase in gross domestic product (GDP) to 2.5 trillion yuan ($334 billion) in the first three quarters of 2023, is an established tech hub with a population of more than 13 million, and companies such as Huawei and Tencent have their headquarters there.

The city’s research and development expenditure accounted for more than five percent of its total GDP in 2022, and it was home to 23,000 state-level high-tech enterprises.

A little over four decades ago, Shenzhen was a fishing town in the Pearl River delta opposite the then British colony of Hong Kong.

As part of the new deal, the investment company Templewater Hong Kong Ltd will work with DMT and the Integrated Transport Centre to explore sustainable public transportation including the launch of green hydrogen-powered buses and cars in Abu Dhabi by 2025. 

Al Shorafa said of the Abu Dhabi-Shenzhen deal: “Abu Dhabi has its sights firmly set on being a global pioneer in sustainable and smart urban development… This is the perfect time to sign a twin city agreement with one of the most advanced cities in the world.”

Officials from Abu Dhabi agreed to collaborate on IT infrastructure as well as transport

It is the latest example of Abu Dhabi turning to China to seek expertise in growing its economy. In November, the city signed an agreement with the province of Jiangsu to target manufacturing growth.

Trade between the UAE and China rose by around 37 percent to $107 billion in 2022, overtaking Saudi-China trade, the think tank Asia House said.

Other collaborations proposed under the agreement between Abu Dhabi and Shenzhen include the Chinese city’s Urban Transport Planning Centre Co Ltd and DMT to establish a joint laboratory to develop smarter, safer and greener transport systems in Abu Dhabi. 

A deal with Huawei will explore enhanced IT infrastructures, vehicle charging and a holographic road network and traffic optimisation system.

Earlier this month, Abu Dhabi linked up with Hycap, an asset manager based in the UK that funds net zero projects, to develop an industrial complex for green hydrogen to include an electrolysis plant, hydrogen storage and tankers for transport.

Abu Dhabi published its hydrogen policy and regulatory framework in 2022 and announced last year that it intends to roll out a carbon certification framework for the hydrogen industry in 2024. 

The emirate’s non-oil economy grew 7.7 percent in the third quarter of 2023, the latest data from the Statistics Centre, Abu Dhabi has revealed.

The economy reached its highest quarterly value at AED290.5 billion ($79.1 billion), rising one percent year on year in real GDP despite a decline in oil prices.

The hydrogen rainbow

  • Green hydrogen is produced on a carbon-neutral basis through water electrolysis. 
  • Turquoise hydrogen is created when natural gas is broken down into hydrogen and solid carbon with the help of methane pyrolysis.
  • Blue hydrogen is generated from the steam reduction of natural gas. 
  • Grey hydrogen is obtained by steam reforming fossil fuels such as natural gas or coal. 
  • Sometimes other colours are ascribed to hydrogen, based on how it is produced. For red, pink and violet hydrogen, the electrolysers are driven by nuclear power. 
  • Yellow hydrogen is hydrogen produced from a mixture of renewable energies and fossil fuels. 
  • White hydrogen is a waste product of other chemical processes, while the use of coal as a fuel produces brown hydrogen.

Latest articles

A Diwali celebration held during Expo 2020 in Dubai. GCC officials want to work together to prevent event clashes

Tourism chiefs call for GCC-wide events calendar

Gulf Cooperation Council nations should co-ordinate their event schedules to avoid overlaps and entice tourists to make multiple stops in the region, officials have said at the Arabian Travel Market conference. The six GCC governments – Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the UAE – are exploring ways to co-operate on tourism, including a […]

A worker arranges vegetables to be displayed at a market in Maadi, a suburb of Cairo, Egypt, February 26, 2024. REUTERS/Mohamed Abd El Ghany

Egyptian businesses yet to feel effect of $60bn new funding

The close to $60 billion in new funding announced for Egypt in recent months has yet to trickle down to average business people in the country, according to the results of a new monthly survey. Difficult market conditions in Egypt continued in April as the monthly S&P Global Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) slid from 47.6 […]

The Saudi Coffee Company launched a model farm in Jazan in November 2023 and will invest SAR1 billion ($270 million) in the sector over the next decade

PIF unit launches first Saudi coffee producer

Saudi Arabia’s coffee exports are poised for major uplift as a unit of the Public Investment Fund (PIF), the kingdom’s sovereign wealth fund, received approval to set up the country’s first coffee-production unit. The Royal Commission for Jubail and Yanbu President Khalid Al-Salem granted the Saudi Coffee Company a license to establish a coffee-production factory […]

Watching the launch of the Hope Mars probe at the Mohammed bin Rashid Space Centre. The centre's assistant director says private sector involvement is essential

Private sector ‘always better’ says UAE space industry head

The UAE is working to lure greater private sector participation in its space industry, according to an official from the Mohammed Bin Rashid Space Centre.  “We are putting a lot of effort towards including the private sector in our projects,” Mohammad Al Ghafri, assistant director general of the aerospace engineering sector at MBRSC, said this […]