- BMW Secures Green Hydrogen Supply from Lhyfe as Steyr Plant Prepares for Fuel Cell Production Scale-Up
- Europe’s e-SAF Supply Gap Raises Structural Risk for Aviation Decarbonisation Under ReFuelEU Mandate
- John Cockerill Completes 25MW Electrolyzer Installation at Zeebrugge Hydrogen Hub
- US Pushback on Global Shipping Carbon Tax Raises Cost Concerns at IMO Talks
Browsing: Projects
Court Signals Possible Reversal of DOE Cuts as California’s ARCHES Hydrogen Hub Hangs in Balance
Federal support for US hydrogen hubs, a cornerstone of the country’s clean energy strategy, faces renewed scrutiny after a December court hearing suggested a potential reinstatement of $1.2 billion for California’s ARCHES hydrogen hub.
Fortescue and Statkraft Extend Holmaneset PPA as Norway Green Hydrogen Timeline Shifts to 2029
Fortescue Metals Group and Statkraft have agreed to amend and extend their existing power purchase agreement for the proposed Holmaneset green hydrogen and green ammonia facility, pushing the agreement horizon to 2029 and converting it into a 10-year power supply commitment.
At the Altindag Cultural Center in Visoko, on December 18, a panel discussion titled “Green and Digital Transition of Bosnia and Herzegovina” brought together experts in energy, digitalization, sustainable development, and media.
Plug Power Installs 5 MW PEM Electrolyzer as Namibia Advances Commercial Green Hydrogen Use
Plug Power confirmed the installation of its 5 MW GenEco proton exchange membrane electrolyzer for Cleanergy Solutions Namibia at a site near Walvis Bay, marking what the companies describe as Africa’s first fully integrated green hydrogen production and distribution facility.
Fortescue Metals Group has revised the power purchase agreement for its Holmaneset green hydrogen and ammonia project in Norway, effectively postponing the plant’s operational start beyond 2029.
ExxonMobil’s decision to reduce planned low-carbon spending by roughly one-third marks a sharper turn in the oil and gas sector’s recalibration of energy transition strategies.
Samsung E&A Enters U.S. SAF Market as Engineering, Not Fuel Supply, Becomes Real Constraint
Sustainable aviation fuel capacity is expanding far more slowly than airline decarbonization targets require, and the gap is increasingly shaped less by feedstock availability than by project execution risk. Against that backdrop, Samsung E&A’s newly awarded Front End Engineering Design (FEED) contract for a large-scale SAF facility in Louisiana highlights where bottlenecks are forming in the global SAF market.
A recent public post on LinkedIn by energy commentator Joe Romm discusses concerns highlighted in a Bloomberg analysis regarding U.S. policy on renewable energy and its potential impact on the artificial intelligence (AI) boom.
Global hydrogen demand currently consumes close to 100 million tonnes annually for refining and ammonia production, creating a potential market…
Type One Energy aims to achieve first plasma from its Infinity-1 validation device by decade’s end, positioning construction of the…
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