Thank you.
My apologies; I think Mollie dropped off. Maybe her house went through a tunnel.
Anyway, the hydrogen strategy points to both economic and environmental opportunities across the entire country. It's a great point. It really positions us to be the world leader for hydrogen and the technologies that use it. We're already providing our technologies to pretty much every country in the world that's deploying hydrogen.
That economic opportunity has changed significantly in the past year. Projections a year ago were that the global market would be about $2.5 trillion, and by September 2020, those projections led to $11.7 trillion. More than 20 countries have released their own hydrogen strategies in the past year as well, backed by more than $80 billion in guaranteed investments and upwards of $200 billion in total investment.
Canada continues to provide the technologies into that market, but countries—you're right—are looking to us to also provide clean hydrogen.
You may have seen about a month ago that we entered into a agreement with Germany to look at opportunities for Canada to provide clean, low-cost hydrogen to the European market. Recent studies show that upwards of 25 to 35 megatonnes of hydrogen could be produced in Quebec, in Canada's east coast, that could be exported into the European market. Again, that's an $11.7-trillion global market.
Similarly, our natural resources—natural gas and petroleum with carbon abatement—can provide sources of large quantities of clean hydrogen, which could be exported into Asia or also into the United States. We're already exporting hydrogen into the United States, which is produced in Bécancour, Quebec, for instance, by Air Liquide. It's low-carbon-intensity hydrogen.
You're right that it's not just the technologies; our companies are exporting their fuel cells. Look at any country in the world that's using hydrogen right now, and they're using Canadian technology: buses in California, in Japan, in Europe; and light rail in Europe. They're looking to Canadian technologies to keep going forward. The hydrogen story has been a Canadian story for more than a century, and we'll keep pushing forward.