Despite a 15 percent year‑on‑year increase to just over 100,000 fuel cell vehicles (FCEVs) worldwide in 2024, global adoption remains less than 0.2 percent of the total electric vehicle fleet. That sluggish momentum has prompted Honda Motor Company to push back the start‑up of its next‑generation fuel cell module plant in Moka City, Tochigi Prefecture, and cut its inaugural capacity from 30,000 to 20,000 units per year. Originally set to begin production in the fiscal year ending March 31, 2028, Honda’s dedicated facility—which would have reutilized part of its former Powertrain Unit Factory—will now come online on an undetermined later date. By opting out…
Author: Arnes Biogradlija
Europe has set its sights on deploying 40 GW of renewable hydrogen electrolysers by 2030—a target that now hinges as much on financial resilience as on technical prowess. With the €7 million acquisition of the insolvent HH2E Werk Lubmin project, H2Apex Group stakes its claim on what may be Germany’s most promising green hydrogen cluster, but inheriting a sunk‑cost site raises critical questions about execution risk and market timing. By taking full ownership of the 1 GW Lubmin project through its Apex Nova Holding subsidiary, H2Apex gains not only the rights to repurpose a former nuclear site but also a ready‑made grid connection…
Gold Hydrogen’s shares rallied 22 percent after announcing a A$14.5 million investment package led by Toyota Motor Corporation, Mitsubishi Gas Chemical Company, and Eneos Holdings. The three Japanese conglomerates will acquire 20.7 million new shares at A$0.70 each—pricing that represents a 22 percent premium over the stock’s closing price on July 2, 2025—underscoring their confidence in the company’s flagship South Australian project. The funds will underwrite Gold Hydrogen’s next drilling campaign later this year on the Yorke Peninsula, targeting natural hydrogen and helium gas deposits in the Ramsay permit area. As a junior explorer with a focus on naturally occurring hydrogen—an energy vector that bypasses…
The European Commission has tabled a proposal to legally cement a 90% net greenhouse gas emissions reduction target for 2040, compared to 1990 levels, framing the ambitious goal as a direct driver of economic growth and industrial competitiveness. This move amends the European Climate Law, seeking to provide long-term predictability for investors and industry as the bloc navigates its transition to climate neutrality by 2050. The proposal, dated July 2, 2025, is not just a climate target but a cornerstone of a broader economic strategy encapsulated in the “Clean Industrial Deal”. This deal aims to secure the EU as an…
By 2025, hydrogen’s promise as a clean energy vector rests heavily on overcoming storage challenges. Metal hydrides (MHs) offer regulated release and lower‑pressure operation, yet persistently lag in gravimetric density and safety validation—a tension highlighted in a recent review of 173 peer‑reviewed studies on MH storage risk assessment. Hydrogen’s High‑Density Appeal Meets Material Limits Hydrogen’s gravimetric energy density (33.33 kWh/kg) surpasses that of gasoline (12 kWh/kg) by nearly threefold, while its volumetric density in MHs can approach 10 wt% % for compounds like NaBH₄ and LiAlH₄. Yet system‑level densities—and the heavy reactors needed to manage high desorption temperatures (up to 400 °C)—cause overall energy‑in‑storage per…
As EU heads of state prepare to land in Beijing for the 50th anniversary of diplomatic ties, energy cooperation occupies a rare place of consensus amid broader geopolitical friction. Bilateral trade now exceeds €2.3 billion each day, yet the relationship is strained by China’s restrictive rare‑earth export regime and Europe’s pending electric‑vehicle tariffs. Nowhere is this tension more pronounced than in the realm of decarbonization: Europe needs China’s minerals for wind turbines, batteries, and electrolyzers even as Berlin slashes its own green‑hydrogen subsidies. Trade Scale vs. Strategic Anxiety China remains the EU’s second‑largest trading partner, accounting for nearly 15 percent of goods…
Atmos Renewables and Nomad Energy have finalized financing for the 100 MW / 400 MWh Merredin battery energy storage system (BESS)—a $220 million project that translates to roughly $550 000 per MWh in capital costs, more than triple the 2024 global median turnkey price of $165 000 / MWh. CapEx Premium Reflects Remote Connection and Scale At $220 million for 400 MWh of storage, Merredin’s capital expenditure works out to $550 000 / MWh. By comparison, BloombergNEF’s 2024 survey found global average turnkey BESS pricing at just $165 000 / MWh—down 40 percent year‑on‑year to US$165 / kWh (equivalent to US$165,000 / MWh). The Merredin site’s higher cost likely reflects its location eight kilometres from Merredin town, the need for new grid interconnection…
At an estimated production cost of €2.50 per kilogram—half the price of Europe’s subsidized hydrogen—Brazil is positioning itself as a low-cost exporter in the global green hydrogen market. Backed by over €1.3 billion in investments, H2Brazil’s twin projects in Uberaba and Açu signal a strategic move to industrialize hydrogen at scale by leveraging the country’s renewable-rich power grid and export-oriented infrastructure. Uberaba: Scale, Synergy, and Export Readiness The centerpiece of H2Brazil’s strategy is its 820MW electrolyzer-based complex in Uberaba, Minas Gerais. The facility aims to produce 125,000 tonnes of hydrogen annually, feeding 700,000 tonnes of green ammonia, a volume large…
The halt of EWE’s hydrogen project in Bremen, following ArcelorMittal’s decision to abandon its hydrogen transition plans, underscores a core vulnerability in Germany’s industrial decarbonization ambitions: without committed buyers and stable policy, green hydrogen infrastructure remains commercially untenable. Buyer Withdrawals Undermine Project Viability The Mittelsbüren project, intended to anchor Bremen’s role in the green hydrogen economy, was conceived as a climate-neutral production hub supplying hydrogen to ArcelorMittal’s steel operations. But once the steel giant opted to stick with conventional production methods, the project lost its economic linchpin. EWE, left without a primary off-taker, suspended the initiative—an implicit acknowledgment of hydrogen’s…
By 2024, Germany conducted nearly 700,000 energy consultations. The result? A resounding rejection of hydrogen as a viable heating solution for homes. Despite mounting political enthusiasm, expert consensus is increasingly clear: hydrogen heating is a costly detour in the path to decarbonizing residential buildings. The Economics Don’t Add Up Green hydrogen—produced via electrolysis using renewable electricity—currently accounts for just 0.1% of global hydrogen supply. At two to three times the cost of fossil-derived hydrogen (grey hydrogen), its price tag alone renders it economically unviable for residential heating. Thirty-two independent studies evaluated by CORRECTIV show hydrogen heating as consistently more expensive…