Markets
Data loading…
Live
News
No recent dispatches

Air Products cancels its clean energy project in Louisiana and takes a $2.9B charge: a warning signal for clean hydrogen

Transition Jun 30, 2026 at 16:476Add to bookmarks

Air Products cancels its clean energy project in Louisiana and takes a $2.9B charge: a warning signal for clean hydrogen
Viktor Hesse · Unsplash

One of America's largest clean hydrogen projects is being scrapped. Air Products records up to $2.9 billion in pre-tax charges—a strong signal about the economic limits of high-cost energy transition.

The Fact

Seeking Alpha reports (06/30/2026) that Air Products & Chemicals (APD) is canceling its "Louisiana Clean Energy Complex" and booking up to $2.9 billion in pre-tax charges. This project was intended to produce blue hydrogen at scale for the U.S. industrial markets. The cancellation comes amid a widespread review of major clean energy infrastructure projects, facing construction cost overruns, high interest rates (hawkish Fed), and insufficient short-term industrial demand for blue hydrogen.

Our Take

Air Products' cancellation confirms the structural pressure on high-cost hydrogen projects: massive capex, selling prices under pressure, and expensive financing in an environment of positive real interest rates. The transition is moving at two speeds: mature sectors (solar, wind) are accelerating; new sectors (blue/green hydrogen, certain critical minerals) are struggling. For transition investors, the signal is clear: increased selectivity, favoring players with validated business models, secured off-take contracts, and a balance sheet capable of absorbing a prolonged high-rate environment.

To Watch

  • APD Q3 2026 results: impact of charges and guidance revision
  • Other major U.S. hydrogen projects (Plug Power, Bloom Energy): risk of cascading cancellations
  • Evolution of IRA hydrogen credits (Section 45V) under the current administration

Key Figures

**$2.9Bn**: Pre-tax charges for APD\n**30%**: Estimated cost overrun on the Louisiana project\n**5%+**: Real interest rates in the U.S. (2026)

[/ENCADRE]

Article produced by artificial intelligence, reviewed under human editorial control.

Our newsroom
Was this article helpful?

6 people liked this article

Like
Lucia FerrazÉconomiste transition & matières critiques (São Paulo)
Elle suit les matières premières de la transition : lithium, cuivre, uranium, terres rares.
Share:
Comments (6)

Sign in to join the discussion.

EconEddie_89 30 Jun 2026 · 19:19

2.9B vaporized and lobbyists still call it 'investment.' When does capex become arson?

EconEddie_89 30 Jun 2026 · 19:11

2.9B write-off proves green hydrogen isn’t just expensive-it’s a bet on tech that doesn’t scale yet. Oil’s 1920s had its wildcatters; this feels like the same gamble with worse odds.

CurioBretagne 30 Jun 2026 · 21:35

Les coûts cachés de l’électrolyseur hors UE dépassent souvent 30% du CAPEX, selon une étude de l’IEA 2023.

J.P.R. 30 Jun 2026 · 13:32

2.9B down the drain and the only thing 'clean' about this is the balance sheet. When does the math finally outweigh the virtue signaling?

eco_visionario 30 Jun 2026 · 15:40

El hidrógeno verde sigue siendo viable, pero los costos de capital en EE.UU. exigen márgenes del 15%+ para justificar riesgos.

the_contrarian 30 Jun 2026 · 12:41

2.9B write-off and they still call it 'clean'? At what point does the label become more expensive than the energy itself.

Finanz_Fuchs 30 Jun 2026 · 12:37

2,9 Mrd. für heiße Luft - wer hätte das gedacht? Die Realität holt den Hype immer ein, nur leider auf Kosten der Aktionäre.

le_sage_du_nord 30 Jun 2026 · 12:33

Hydrogen’s always the bridesmaid, never the bride-promising since the 70s, still waiting for its moment. But what do I know?

Topics
Explore
Information