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
  • Vattenfall Narrows Nuclear Supplier List as Sweden Eyes First New Reactors in Four Decades
  • Spain’s CIUDEN Puts Sodium-Sulfur Storage to the Test in Hydrogen Integration Project
  • EU Refining Mandates Push Green Hydrogen Toward Commercial Scale
  • Eastern Mediterranean Hydrogen Ambitions Face Economic Promise
  • Advanced Electrode Processing Could Cut Battery Manufacturing Energy Use by Half
  • Wrexham University Plans Modular Green Hydrogen Lab to Advance Engineering Research
  • Egypt and Tokyo Sign MoU to Boost Green Hydrogen Collaboration
  • Libya Partners with H2-Global to Develop Green Hydrogen Export Initiative
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 - Research
Green Hydrogen H2 News

Seawater electrolysis help in hydrogen production

Anela DoksoBy Anela Dokso19/10/20222 Mins Read
Share
LinkedIn Twitter Facebook Email WhatsApp Telegram

According to recent studies, saltwater electrolysis, method for separating water into oxygen and hydrogen, can overcome some of the difficulties that freshwater electrolysis frequently faces. Without aggravating the world’s freshwater problem, seawater electrolysis might provide sustainable hydrogen.

Once hydrogen is created, it can only expel water vapor and warm air while producing energy in a fuel cell. Hydrogen has no negative environmental effects because it does not emit any greenhouse gases, nitrogen oxides, hydrocarbons, or other particle matter.

Several nations, including the United States, Australia, Saudi Arabia, Japan, Chile, and Germany, are making investments in the production of green hydrogen. In order to aid in the accomplishment of the objectives specified in the European Green Deal, the European Union will also invest $430 billion in green hydrogen by 2030.

To overcome the difficulties of producing hydrogen, several scientists and researchers are creating cutting-edge technologies using seawater electrolysis. If these technologies are successful in producing sustainable hydrogen, they won’t deplete freshwater supplies or increase carbon emissions.

For instance, scientists at the Texas Center for Superconductivity developed an electrocatalyst based on nickel and iron that interacts with copper and cobalt to successfully execute seawater electrolysis.

Meanwhile, a researcher at McGill University in Canada named Marta Cerutti and some of her students recently proposed that they come up with a potential fix for one of the major issues with hydrogen production from saltwater.

The Dutch-based partners of German car supplier Schaeffler are working on a pilot project to explore hydrogen extraction from saltwater as part of another line of study. The business is aware that the shift to electric mobility would result in a decline in the need for particular automotive parts.

Systems using polymer electrolysis membranes (PEMs) are being developed by Schaeffler and Dutch Hydron B.V. Prior to using membrane distillation technology, the solution will use waste heat from the electrolysis process to distill salt water.

Projects like this can assist in accelerating the development of seawater electrolysis because hydrogen can play a big role in the renewable energy sector. In this sense, research is essential for assisting nations in lowering the cost of hydrogen generation and reducing their CO2 emissions.

Share. LinkedIn Twitter Facebook Email

Related Posts

Vanadium

Vanadium Ion Breakthrough: 98% Efficiency, 12,000-Cycle Battery Challenges Lithium Dominance in Grid Storage

18/08/2025
hydrogen

Hydrogen Storage’s Hidden Environmental Costs: Scale and Production Methods Drive Lifecycle Impacts

18/08/2025
Batteries Battery

Multi-Objective Optimization Transforms Lithium-Ion Battery Management

08/08/2025
Sodium-Ion

Sodium-Ion Batteries Gain Ground as Lithium Costs and Supply Risks Reshape Storage Markets

30/06/2025
Energy

Transforming Cities: The Radical Rise of Hydrogen-Enhanced Smart Designs

22/05/2025
hydrogen

Multi-Objective Optimization in Hydrogen Production

06/05/2025
Vattenfall Narrows Nuclear Supplier List as Sweden Eyes First New Reactors in Four Decades

Vattenfall Narrows Nuclear Supplier List as Sweden Eyes First New Reactors in Four Decades

22/08/2025
Hydrogen

Spain’s CIUDEN Puts Sodium-Sulfur Storage to the Test in Hydrogen Integration Project

22/08/2025
hydrogen

EU Refining Mandates Push Green Hydrogen Toward Commercial Scale

22/08/2025
hydrogen

Eastern Mediterranean Hydrogen Ambitions Face Economic Promise

22/08/2025

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.