A major boost for the ‘Hydrogen Economy’?

The notion of large-scale use of hydrogen as an energy source has a surprisingly long history. It was first proposed by J.B.S. Haldane in 1923, who envisaged electrolysis of water – releasing hydrogen and oxygen – using power from wind turbines to address this renewable source’s highly variable output effectively by storing it in the form of hydrogen. Since the only other output is oxygen, a hydrogen economy might seem to avoid global warming from the current release of greenhouse gases. However, as a 2023 post on Earth-logs concluded, of all the means for mass production and use of hydrogen only one source is a truly ‘green’ energy source: that emitted from rock by natural processes: so-called ‘white’ hydrogen.  It is known to be generated by the breakdown of the mineral olivine [(Fe,Mg)2SiO4] by water in the absence of oxygen:

3Fe2SiO4 + 2H2O → 2 Fe3O4 + 3SiO­2 +3H2

A more complex reaction is the hydration of olivine to the mineral serpentine [Mg3Si2O5(OH)4], which also yields hydrogen. Olivine is the most important mineral in the Earth’s mantle and abundant in crustal basalts and ultramafic rocks too. Oceanic lithosphere (ophiolites) added by tectonics to the continental crust form obvious targets for seeking natural hydrogen seepage. Yet such surface gas escapes have been documented only from a few sites, including an irrigation well in rural Mali that emitted gas containing 98% hydrogen, and a few natural springs from the Oman ophiolite.

The latest study may have taken the hydrogen economy to a literally deeper level  (Sherwood Lollar, B. &  Warr, O. 2026. Decadal record of continental H2 reservoirs reveals potential for subsurface microbial life and natural H2 exploration. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, v. 123, article e2603895123; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2603895123. PDF requests to owarr@uOttawa.ca and/or barbara.sherwoodlollar@utoronto.ca). Over fifteen years Barbara Sherwood Lollar and Oliver Warr of the Universities of Toronto and Ottawa, Canada monitored gas released by 35 boreholes originally drilled to assess and plan mining of an orebody in Precambrian basement rocks at Kidd Creek near Timmins, Ontario. On average, each of the boreholes released 8 kg of hydrogen per year. Scaled up to the mine’s 15 thousand exploratory boreholes, the mine itself  is estimated to be yielding 140 metric tons of the gas annually. That could provide 4.7 gigawatts of energy per annum, sufficient for the needs of more than 400 Canadian homes.

Schematic cross section through the Kidd Creek Mine, Ontario, Canada. Source American Museum of Natural History

The Timmins mining district is typical of Archaean greenstone belts in the Canadian Shield and in cratons across the world: supracrustal rocks including ultramafic and mafic volcanics and a variety of metasedimentary rocks. The Timmins district is historically Canada’s largest gold producer, but also hosts ores of many other metals. The Kidd Creek Cu-Ag-Zn mine is one of the deepest in North America, which penetrates interlayered felsic, mafic, ultramafic, and metasedimentary rocks to a depth of 2.9 km below the surface. The ores formed by submarine hydrothermal processes around 2.7 Ga ago. The sampled boreholes were drilled horizontally at mine levels between 2.04 to 2.9 km below the surface to penetrate the ore zone and its mafic-ultramafic host rocks. Rather than yielding gas, the holes release briny fluids in which hydrogen, helium and various hydrocarbon gases are dissolved. They are similar to fluids issuing from other deep mines, but differ in showing their formation mainly to be through inorganic reactions with the bed rock rather than as a result of microbial metabolism that exploits a variety of chemical interactions in the ore, such as reduction of sulfate ions to sulfide. The authors have studied hydrogen yields from a number of other mines in mafic-ultramafic rocks, which are comparable with Kidd Creek. So it may be that hydrogen in vast volumes is being emitted by existing and abandoned metal mines in such igneous terrains.

Sherwood Lollar and Warr authoritatively outline the economic potential of hydrogen production for remote communities and mines in greenstone-belt terrains. They also assess active serpentinisation of ophiolites and kimberlites by near-surface groundwater and associated microbial ecosystems as hydrogen sources, the few that have been studied seeming to produce even larger amounts of hydrogen. But they also note that their closer proximity to the surface means that these geological features are generally ‘open-systems’ prone to rapid loss of gases. However, in the manner of hydrocarbon gas fields, some ophiolites may host large amounts of hydrogen if they are capped by younger clay-rich sedimentary strata. Whatever, the global warming of what might be called the ‘Hydrocarbon Age’ is set to become a disaster. Breaking its death grip should be the principal economic agenda, which requires the most rapid turn to long-term energy alternatives. Natural hydrogen could be a part of that, and hopefully the work of Sherwood Lollar and Warr, and others like them, should lead to determined exploration and assessment of this novel physical resource. In Scandinavia a Nordic Hydrogen Route is being proposed. This Swedish-Finnish initiative is based on the Scandinavian Shield and its greenstone terrains and numerous mines driven into them. One would hope that its entrepreneurs are considering naturally emitted hydrogen rather than or as well as sources given other coloured labels.

See also: Canada’s Billion-Year-Old Rocks Could Hold the Future of Clean Energy. Sci Tech Daily, 21 May 2026.

Darwin’s ‘warm little pond’: a new discovery

There may still be a few people around today who, like Aristotle did, reckon that frogs form from May dew and that maggots and rats spring into life spontaneously from refuse. But the idea that life emerged somehow from the non-living is, to most of us, the only viable theory. Yet the question, ‘How?’, is still being pondered on. Readers may find Chapter 13 of Stepping Stones useful. There I tried to summarise in some detail most of the modern lines of research. But the issue boils down to means of inorganically creating the basic chemical building blocks from which life’s vast and complex array of molecules might have been assembled. Living materials are dominated by five cosmically common elements: carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen and phosphorus – CHONP for short. Organic chemists can readily synthesise countless organic compounds from CHONP. And astronomers have discovered that life is not needed to assemble the basic ingredients: amino acids, carbon-ring compounds and all kinds of simpler CHONP molecules occur in meteorites, comets and even interstellar molecular clouds. So an easy way out is to assume that such ingredients ended up on the early Earth simply because it grew through accretion of older materials from the surrounding galaxy. Somehow, perhaps, their mixing in air, water and sediments together with a kind of chaotic shuffling did the job, in the way that an infinity of caged monkeys with access to typewriters might eventually create the entire works of William Shakespeare.  But, aside from the statistical and behavioural idiocy of that notion, there is a real snag: the vaporisation of the proto-Earth’s outer parts by a Moon-forming planetary collision shortly after initial accretion.

In 1871 Charles Darwin suggested to his friend Joseph Hooker that:

          ‘… if (and Oh, what a big if) we could conceive in some warm little pond, with all sorts of ammonia and phosphoric salts, light, heat, electricity, etc., present that a protein compound was chemically formed, ready to undergo still more complex changes, at the present day such matter would be instantly devoured or absorbed, which would never have been the case before living creatures were formed’.

Followed up in the 1920s by theorists Alexander Oparin and J.B.S. Haldane, a similar hypothesis was tested practically by Harold Urey and Stanley Miller at the University of Chicago. They devised a Heath-Robinson simulation of an early atmosphere and ocean seeded with simple CHONP (plus a little sulfur) chemicals, simmered it and passed electrical discharges through it for a week. The resulting dark red ‘soup’ contained 10 of the 20 amino acids from which a vast array of proteins can be built. A repeat in 1995 also yielded two of the four nucleobases at the heart of DNA – adenine and guanine.  But simply having such chemicals around is unlikely to result in life, unless they are continually in close contact: a vessel or bag in which such chemicals can interact. The best candidates for such a containing membrane are fatty acids of a form known as amphiphiles. One end of an amphiphile chain has an affinity for water molecules, whereas the other repels them. This duality enables layers of them, when assembled in water, spontaneously to curl up to make three dimensional membranes looking like bubbles. In the last year they too have been created in vitro (Purvis, G. et al. 2024. Generation of long-chain fatty acids by hydrogen-driven bicarbonate reduction in ancient alkaline hydrothermal vents. Nature Communications (Earth & Environment), v. 5, article 30; DOI: 10.1038/s43247-023-01196-4).

Cell-like membranes formed by fatty acid amphiphiles

Graham Purvis and colleagues from Newcastle University, UK allowed three very simple ingredients – hydrogen and bicarbonate ions dissolved in water and the iron oxide magnetite (Fe3O4) – to interact. Such a simple, inorganic mixture commonly occurs in hydrothermal vents and hot springs. Bicarbonate ions (HCO3) form when CO2 dissolves in water, the hydrogen and magnetite being generated during the breakdown of iron silicates (olivines) when  ultramafic igneous rocks react with water:

3Fe2SiO4 + 2H2O → 2 Fe3O4 + 3SiO­2 +3H2

Various simulations of hydrothermal fluids had previously been tried without yielding amphiphile molecules. Purvis et al. simplified their setup to a bicarbonate solution in water that contained dissolved hydrogen – a simplification of the fluids emitted by hydrothermal vents – at 16 times atmospheric pressure and a temperature of 90°C. This was passed over magnetite. Under alkaline conditions their reaction cell yielded a range of chain-like hydrocarbon molecules. Among them was a mixture of fatty acids up to 18 carbon atoms in length. The experiment did not incorporate P, but its generation of amphiphiles that can create cell-like structures are but a step away from forming the main structural components of cell membranes, phospholipids.

When emergence of bag-forming membranes took place is, of course, hard to tell. But in the oldest geological formations ultramafic lava flows are far more common than they are today. In the Hadean and Eoarchaean, even if actual mantle rocks had not been obducted as at modern plate boundaries, at the surface there would have been abundant source materials for the vital amphiphiles to be generated through interaction with water and gases: perhaps in ‘hot little ponds’. To form living, self-replicating cells requires such frothy membranes to have captured and held amino acids and nucleobases. Such proto-cells could become organic reaction chambers where chemical building blocks continually interacted, eventually to evolve the complex forms upon which living cells depend.