Close Menu
Energy NewsEnergy News
  • NEWS
    • Breaking News
    • Hydrogen
    • Energy Storage
    • Grid
    • SMR
    • Projects
    • Production
    • Transport
    • Research
  • SPOTLIGHT
    • Interviews
    • Face 2 Face
    • Podcast
    • Webinars
    • Analysis
    • Columnists
    • Reviews
    • Events
  • REGIONAL
    • Africa
    • Americas
    • Asia
    • Europe
    • Middle east
    • Pacific
  • COMMUNITY
  • ABOUT
    • Advisory Board
    • Contact us
    • Report Your News
    • Advertize
    • Subscribe
LinkedIn X (Twitter) YouTube Facebook
Trending
  • South Korea’s Largest Hydrogen-Only Fuel Cell Plant Begins Operation in Ulsan
  • Ingeteam Commissions Castilla y León’s First Green Hydrogen Plant
  • Norway’s Karmsund Hydrogen Project to Begin Operations in 2028
  • ITM Power Bets on ‘Hydrogen-as-a-Service’ with New German Subsidiary Hydropulse
  • Greece Weighs Hydrogen Ambitions Against Power Costs and Lack of Subsidies
  • Teesside to Anchor £96M Pipeline Push as Ofgem Backs East Coast Hydrogen Network
  • RIC Energy Secures Site for 220MW Hydrogen-Based E-Fuels Project in Castilla y León
  • ITM Power Gets FEED Contract for Uniper’s Humber H2ub
LinkedIn X (Twitter) YouTube Facebook
Energy NewsEnergy News
  • NEWS
    • Breaking News
    • Hydrogen
    • Energy Storage
    • Grid
    • SMR
    • Projects
    • Production
    • Transport
    • Research
  • SPOTLIGHT
    • Interviews
    • Face 2 Face
    • Podcast
    • Webinars
    • Analysis
    • Columnists
    • Reviews
    • Events
  • REGIONAL
    • Africa
    • Americas
    • Asia
    • Europe
    • Middle east
    • Pacific
  • COMMUNITY
  • ABOUT
    • Advisory Board
    • Contact us
    • Report Your News
    • Advertize
    • Subscribe
Energy NewsEnergy News
Home Home - Americas
Green Hydrogen H2 News

GE’s gas plant successfully burns hydrogen blend

Arnes BiogradlijaBy Arnes Biogradlija25/04/20222 Mins Read
Share
LinkedIn Twitter Facebook Email WhatsApp Telegram
The Long Ridge Energy Terminal Power Plant in Hannibal, Ohio is currently burning a hydrogen mix. It’s a significant step toward the plant’s goal of being carbon-free.

While the 485MW combined-cycle plant began commercial operations in October 2021, on March 30, 2022, it successfully completed a hydrogen-blending demonstration.

This is the first time one of GE’s H-Class gas turbines has used hydrogen in a commercially running plant anywhere in the world, according to company officials.

Long Ridge Energy Terminal is powered by a GE 7HA.02 gas turbine, which can initially burn between 15-20 percent hydrogen by volume in the gas stream and will eventually be able to burn up to 100 percent hydrogen.

For the demonstration, a 5% hydrogen mix was introduced into the gas turbine’s combustion system. Further enhancements, according to GE, will allow the plant to burn larger percentages of hydrogen, depending on fuel availability and economics.

The Long Ridge Energy Terminal has been in the works for more than five years. The power plant was constructed on the site of former aluminum production, and rail and LNG loading facilities were included in the design. The plant was designed from the start to be a pure CCGT operation.

The project intends to create hydrogen on-site and is investigating large-scale hydrogen storage in below-ground formations. Long Ridge has access to Ohio River water for electrolysis to make green hydrogen.

A subsidiary of Fortress Transportation and Infrastructure Investors LLC owns Long Ridge.

GE, Siemens, and Mitsubishi Power, among other major power generating OEMs, have been concentrating their efforts on hydrogen combustion in gas turbines, particularly for large-scale generation.

Materials and techniques have been developed by the industry to improve the amount of hydrogen that can be combusted. These advancements have allowed hydrogen to be burned at concentrations of over 90% in simple-cycle turbines or aero-derivative machines, and up to 50% in large-frame combined-cycle turbines, according to the US Department of Energy.

While hydrogen combustion is viable energy storage and conversion method, it is not a “drop-in” fuel for many of today’s natural gas-fired energy conversion devices, according to experts.

Though significant progress has been made, more research, development, and demonstration are needed to address issues such as auto-ignition, flashback, thermo-acoustics, mixing requirements, aerothermal heat transfer, materials issues, turndown, and combustion dynamics, NOx emissions, and other combustion-related issues, according to the DOE’s hydrogen plan.

Share. LinkedIn Twitter Facebook Email

Related Posts

Hydrogen

South Korea’s Largest Hydrogen-Only Fuel Cell Plant Begins Operation in Ulsan

25/06/2025
Hydrogen

Ingeteam Commissions Castilla y León’s First Green Hydrogen Plant

25/06/2025
hydrogen

Norway’s Karmsund Hydrogen Project to Begin Operations in 2028

25/06/2025
hydrogen

ITM Power Bets on ‘Hydrogen-as-a-Service’ with New German Subsidiary Hydropulse

25/06/2025
hydrogen

Greece Weighs Hydrogen Ambitions Against Power Costs and Lack of Subsidies

25/06/2025
hydrogen

Teesside to Anchor £96M Pipeline Push as Ofgem Backs East Coast Hydrogen Network

24/06/2025
Hydrogen

South Korea’s Largest Hydrogen-Only Fuel Cell Plant Begins Operation in Ulsan

25/06/2025
Hydrogen

Ingeteam Commissions Castilla y León’s First Green Hydrogen Plant

25/06/2025
hydrogen

Norway’s Karmsund Hydrogen Project to Begin Operations in 2028

25/06/2025
hydrogen

ITM Power Bets on ‘Hydrogen-as-a-Service’ with New German Subsidiary Hydropulse

25/06/2025

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news from the hydrogen market subscribe to our newsletter.

LinkedIn X (Twitter) Facebook YouTube

News

  • Inteviews
  • Webinars
  • Hydrogen
  • Spotlight
  • Regional

Company

  • Advertising
  • Media Kits
  • Contact Info
  • GDPR Policy

Subscriptions

  • Subscribe
  • Newsletters
  • Sponsored News

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news from EnergyNewsBiz about hydrogen.

© 2025 EnergyNews.biz
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Accessibility

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.