On June 2, 2021, during the Innovating to Net Zero Summit in Santiago, Chile, 23 governments[1], including the U.S. and Japan, launched Mission Innovation 2.0, the second phase of the Mission Innovation initiative.[2] The Mission Innovation initiative was launched alongside the Paris Agreement at the 2015 COP21 conference to make clean energy affordable by accelerating investment, collaboration, and innovation. Since 2015, member governments, collectively responsible for over 90% of global public investment in clean energy innovation, have increased clean energy innovation investments by $18 billion.
As a part of the initiative, each member will develop National Innovation Pathways to describe their plans to encourage innovation to meet their climate and energy goals up to 2030. Mission Innovation 2.0 will initially focus on three “missions” to scale up “clean” hydrogen, zero-emission shipping, and renewable power systems in various locations. First, the Clean Hydrogen mission will be led by Australia, Chile, the U.K., the U.S., and the European Union, and aims to make clean hydrogen cost-competitive by reducing costs to $2/kg by 2030 by increasing research. The mission also intends to develop at least 100 geographic hubs for hydrogen production, storage, and end-use by 2030. Second, Denmark, the U.S., and Norway, together with the Global Maritime Forum and the Maersk McKinney Moller Center for Zero Carbon Shipping, will lead the Zero-Emissions Shipping mission, with the goal of zero-emissions ships making up at least 5% of the global deep-sea fleet by 2030. Third, the Green Powered Future mission, led by China, Italy, and the U.K., aims to demonstrate that power systems in various locations will be able to integrate up to 100% renewable energy by 2030. These missions will be underpinned by a new “global Innovation Platform” that will strengthen confidence and awareness in emerging technologies and maximize national investment impacts.
[1] Austria, Australia, Brazil, Canada, Chile, China, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, India, Italy, Japan, the Republic of Korea, Morocco, the Netherlands, Norway, Saudi Arabia, Sweden, the United Arab Emirates, the United Kingdom, the United States of America, and the European Commission (on behalf of the European Union)
[2] http://mission-innovation.net/2021/06/02/decade-clean-energy-innovation-mi-6/#_ftn1