Planning resilient hydrogen supply chains under disruption risk
Pith reviewed 2026-06-27 14:33 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Risk-aware planning for EU hydrogen imports avoids 12% welfare losses from supply disruptions.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
Using a stochastic optimisation model of EU hydrogen imports, naive infrastructure planning that neglects supply disruption risks results in welfare losses of 12 percent (24 billion euros) compared to risk-aware planning. The latter requires higher initial investments but achieves welfare levels close to an idealised system without disruptions through a different configuration focused on diversification across import corridors and strategic over-investment in transport capacity, pipelines, and shipping terminals.
What carries the argument
Stochastic optimisation model that incorporates disruption probabilities and impact parameters to select hydrogen import infrastructure under risk.
If this is right
- Higher upfront infrastructure spending produces networks that maintain near-ideal welfare when disruptions occur.
- Diversification across multiple import corridors reduces exposure to single-point failures.
- Strategic over-investment increases intra-European transport capacity and broadens the set of import pipelines.
- Investments shift toward costly shipping terminals for hydrogen carriers.
- Incorporating supply risk prevents the structural vulnerabilities observed in fossil fuel systems.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The same modelling approach could be applied to other emerging fuel chains such as ammonia or synthetic methane imports.
- Policy makers in regions outside the EU might adapt the framework when designing their own green fuel corridors.
- If real disruption frequencies turn out lower than modelled, the extra investment could still provide option value for future demand growth.
- Updating the model with post-2022 energy crisis data would test whether the quantified welfare gap holds under observed import shocks.
Load-bearing premise
The disruption probabilities and impact parameters in the model accurately represent real-world risks for hydrogen imports.
What would settle it
A direct comparison of realised welfare or cost outcomes during actual supply disruptions between a hydrogen network built under naive planning and one built under risk-aware planning.
read the original abstract
Despite growing concerns over energy security, infrastructure planning and modelling for emerging green fuel supply chains often neglect risks from supply disruptions. Using a stochastic optimisation model of EU hydrogen imports, we show that 'naive' infrastructure planning results in welfare losses of 12 % (24 billion EUR) compared to risk-aware planning that anticipates supply disruptions. Despite requiring higher upfront investments, anticipatory planning achieves welfare levels close to those of an idealised system without disruptions, but entails a markedly different infrastructure configuration. Two complementary resilience strategies emerge: diversification across import corridors and strategic over-investment. This leads to increased intra-European transport capacity, a broader set of import pipelines, and investments in costly shipping terminals for hydrogen carriers. Our results show that incorporating supply risk considerations into infrastructure planning helps prevent the structural vulnerabilities seen in fossil fuel systems when designing future hydrogen supply chains.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript develops a stochastic optimisation model of EU hydrogen imports that incorporates supply disruption risks. It claims that 'naive' planning ignoring these risks produces 12% (24 billion EUR) welfare losses relative to risk-aware planning, which achieves near-ideal welfare levels via diversification across import corridors, increased intra-European transport capacity, broader pipeline sets, and investments in shipping terminals for hydrogen carriers.
Significance. If the disruption probabilities and severity parameters can be shown to be empirically grounded, the result would be significant for energy-security policy: it quantifies the cost of neglecting risk in emerging green-fuel chains and identifies concrete resilience strategies (diversification plus strategic over-investment) that could prevent fossil-fuel-style vulnerabilities.
major comments (2)
- [Model section] Model section (stochastic formulation): the disruption probabilities and impact parameters that drive the 12% welfare-loss figure and the derived infrastructure recommendations are presented without any data sources, historical calibration, elicitation method, or external validation; this is load-bearing for the central quantitative claim.
- [Results section] Results section (welfare comparison): no sensitivity ranges, robustness checks, or error analysis are reported for the key risk parameters, so it is impossible to determine whether the 24 billion EUR loss and the 'near-ideal' welfare outcome are robust or artefacts of particular parameter choices.
minor comments (1)
- The abstract states quantitative results but supplies no model equations, validation steps, or data sources; adding a short clause on the modelling approach would improve readability.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
Thank you for the opportunity to respond to the referee's comments. We address each major comment in turn and outline the revisions we will make to the manuscript.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Model section] Model section (stochastic formulation): the disruption probabilities and impact parameters that drive the 12% welfare-loss figure and the derived infrastructure recommendations are presented without any data sources, historical calibration, elicitation method, or external validation; this is load-bearing for the central quantitative claim.
Authors: We agree that the manuscript would benefit from explicit documentation of the parameter sources. In the revised version, we will expand the Model section to include a new subsection detailing the derivation of disruption probabilities and impact parameters, drawing on historical energy disruption data from sources such as the International Energy Agency and relevant academic literature on supply chain risks. This will include the elicitation method used and references for validation. revision: yes
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Referee: [Results section] Results section (welfare comparison): no sensitivity ranges, robustness checks, or error analysis are reported for the key risk parameters, so it is impossible to determine whether the 24 billion EUR loss and the 'near-ideal' welfare outcome are robust or artefacts of particular parameter choices.
Authors: We acknowledge the absence of sensitivity analysis in the current results section. To address this, we will add a new subsection in the Results section presenting sensitivity ranges for the key risk parameters, including variations in disruption probabilities and severities. This will include robustness checks across different parameter sets and an analysis of how these affect the welfare loss estimates and infrastructure recommendations. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No significant circularity; derivation self-contained
full rationale
The paper deploys a standard stochastic optimisation model whose outputs (welfare losses, infrastructure configurations) are generated from external disruption scenarios treated as inputs. No quoted equations, self-citations, or fitted parameters reduce the headline claims to definitions or prior author work by construction. The 12 % / 24 bn EUR result is an optimisation outcome under stated assumptions, not a renaming or self-referential prediction. This is the normal non-circular case for an applied optimisation study.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
Reference graph
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