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Author: Arnes Biogradlija
New projects, agreements, and technology for producing and storing green hydrogen have been disclosed by numerous businesses and laboratories in Germany, Canada, the United States, Indonesia, and Thailand.
The objective is to create green hydrogen there without CO2 using wind energy while testing both its integration into the energy system and its individual parts.
This industrial project involves “generation and supply” activities, and Enagás Renovable, a subsidiary of Enagás, which is also the sole shareholder of Enagás Transporte, owns 44% of the promoter business.
According to data tracked by the specialized energy platform, India’s green hydrogen plan is essential to attaining its aim of becoming carbon neutral and a developed nation by 2047.
UK government declared in August that it hoped the UK would become a global leader in the hydrogen industry, leading to the creation of “tens of thousands of jobs” and “billions of pounds of investment” via export potential.
Vice Chairperson and CEO of ACWA Power Paddy Padmanathan predicts that by 2026, the company will invest up to $10 billion in Egypt.
In Newcastle, UK, a collaboration led by Siemens Energy has started construction of a new £3.5 million (US$4.24 million) ammonia cracker prototype that would generate green hydrogen on an industrial scale.
A Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) between Metacon and the Kempten, Germany-based Abwasserverband Kempten has been inked to work together on local, off-grid green hydrogen production from biogas using wastewater as a source of methane.
HDF Energy and DFC (US International Development Finance Corporation) announces technical assistance to develop Renewstable(R) green hydrogen power plants in Indonesia.
The country intends to spend an additional 508 million euros on hydrogen investments in the upcoming year in order to mitigate the energy problem for the people and invest in long-term independence from gas imports.
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