The hydrogen economy has a quiet supply problem. Its name? Iridium. The metal almost no one talks about outside metallurgy departments has become the rate-limiting input for one of the most aggressive decarbonization timelines on the planet. Every PEM electrolyzer built to produce green hydrogen needs iridium for its anode catalyst, and the global supply of iridium can’t keep up (for long).
Iridium is a byproduct of platinum mining, mostly out of South Africa’s Bushveld Complex. You can’t decide to mine more iridium any more than you can decide to harvest more shells from the beach. Whatever the platinum miners pull out is what the world gets, and the rest of the periodic table can’t help.
Meanwhile, electrolyzer order books keep filling. Something has to give.
How Iridium Ended Up at the Center of Green Hydrogen
There are two main electrolyzer technologies in commercial play. Alkaline electrolyzers have been around for a century and use cheap nickel-based catalysts. They work, but they ramp slowly and run best at steady output, which is a poor fit for the variable supply you get from solar and wind farms.
PEM electrolyzers (proton exchange membrane) ramp in seconds, handle partial loads gracefully, and produce high-purity hydrogen at high pressure. Every characteristic that makes them attractive for renewable-paired hydrogen production also depends on operating in a brutally acidic environment. The anode side, where water gets split and oxygen evolves, is one of the most aggressive electrochemical environments in industrial use.
Iridium oxide is one of the only catalysts that survives there. This precious metal resists corrosion, holds its activity for tens of thousands of operating hours, and tolerates the voltage swings that come with renewable input. Researchers have spent decades looking for alternatives, but nothing else has matched it at scale.
So when you build a PEM electrolyzer, you build it with iridium. The rest of the question is just how much.
The Supply Side Is Smaller Than You’d Think
Global iridium production runs between seven and nine tonnes per year, depending on whose accounting you trust. South Africa supplies roughly 80% of that, with smaller contributions from Zimbabwe and Russia. The metal trickles out as a byproduct of platinum and palladium recovery, which means iridium output is tied to platinum demand rather than its own.
Stockpiles exist, but they’re private and undisclosed. Industry estimates put above-ground inventories somewhere in the range of 400-700 tonnes, controlled by refiners, traders, and a handful of large industrial users. That number sounds bigger until you compare it against projected demand.
Iridium price tells the story plainly. Iridium traded around $1,500 per troy ounce in 2020. By mid-2021, it had spiked above $6,000. It has since settled into a volatile band between $4,000 and $5,000, well above gold and platinum, and the volatility is itself the signal. The market is small enough that a single large order can move the spot price for weeks.
The Demand Math Doesn’t Work
Here is where the spreadsheets get tricky. Today’s commercial PEM electrolyzers use roughly one milligram of iridium per watt of capacity. At one milligram per watt, every gigawatt of installed PEM capacity locks up about one tonne of iridium. At two milligrams per watt, two tonnes.
The European Union’s REPowerEU plan calls for 100 GW of electrolyzer capacity by 2030. The IEA’s net-zero pathway calls for several hundred gigawatts globally by 2030 and multiple terawatts by 2050. Even if half that capacity is alkaline rather than PEM, the iridium math collapses quickly.
Sixty gigawatts of PEM at current loadings would consume roughly sixty tonnes of iridium. Annual mine production gives you nine.
This is the gap that has industry analysts, electrolyzer manufacturers, and platinum group metal refiners all watching the same set of numbers. Iridium doesn’t have to run out for the hydrogen rollout to slow down. Truthfully, it just has to get expensive enough, often enough, that project developers start changing their assumptions.
The Industry’s Three-Pronged Response
Three things are happening at once, and all of them need to work: thrifting, alternative chemistries, and recycling iridium.
1. Thrifting
The first is catalyst thrifting. Manufacturers are pushing iridium loadings down hard. Targets in the research literature sit below 0.1 milligrams per watt, a tenfold reduction from current commercial designs. Some prototype systems have hit those numbers, though durability at low loadings is still being proven.
Every order of magnitude of thrifting buys the hydrogen industry roughly a decade of headroom.
2. Alternative Chemistries
The second is alternative chemistries. Anion exchange membrane (AEM) electrolyzers promise PEM-like dynamics without the iridium, using nickel-based catalysts on a less acidic membrane. AEM is real and improving, though still a few years behind PEM in commercial maturity.
Solid oxide electrolyzers skip iridium entirely and offer high efficiency for industrial heat applications, though they are unsuited to variable renewable input.
3. Recycling
The third is recycling iridium, and this is the part the broader industry hasn’t internalized yet. Every iridium-bearing component eventually comes out of service. Spent electrolyzer stacks, used PGM-bearing electrodes from chlor-alkali plants, expired thermocouples from glass and ceramic production, decommissioned aerospace hardware, all of it contains recoverable iridium.
Industrial facilities sitting on that material today often send it to general scrap streams, where the metal value is lost or recovered at a fraction of its actual worth. Closing that loop is a small intervention that meaningfully widens the supply pool.
None of these three solutions is sufficient on its own. All three have to deliver.
What Does This Mean for Hydrogen Project Timelines?
If you’re working on a hydrogen project, an electrolyzer roadmap, or a green steel investment thesis, iridium is now part of the analysis whether you wanted it to be or not.
The hydrogen economy won’t run aground on iridium scarcity in the next year or two, but 2026 is said to be a “make or break year.” The bottleneck shows up later, in the gap between announced capacity and actually-built capacity, and it shows up first in the price line of the bill of materials.
The industries best positioned to weather it are the ones treating PGM supply as a strategic question right now: securing offtake, designing for low loadings, and building recycling into the lifecycle from the first stack onward.
Every gigawatt of green hydrogen tightens the iridium market. The only question is whether the supply side moves fast enough to keep up.
To learn more about iridium recycling and getting the most value for commercial scrap metal, contact the pros at Scrap Gators in Fort Pierce, FL.