- EU Considers Expanding Carbon Pricing to Long Haul Aviation as ETS Reform Intensifies
- Germany Commits €350 Million to Schwedt eSAF Plant as Aviation Fuel Targets Tighten
- New York Targets Embodied Carbon in Construction as City Moves to Reshape Building Material Standards
- Energy Storage Funding Reaches $2.3B in Q1 as Investors Shift Toward Scalable Battery Tech
Browsing: Europe
Everfuel’s Scandinavian green hydrogen fueling strategy for trucks, buses, and cars connects the major traffic corridors in Sweden, Norway, and Denmark with this scheme.
The Region’s task will be to identify the sectors in which the energy vector in question will become competitive in a short period of time
The aim is to design, manufacture, and market fuel cell systems for heavy-duty vehicle applications and other applications
The fleet of 15 First Aberdeen buses, built in the UK by Wrightbus, has now saved 170,000kg of CO2 from being released into the environment since its launch in January
The hydrogen release plant is now operational, and the efficiency of the re-released hydrogen is being tested for a minimum of six months by the participating Finnish research institute VTT in Espoo.
ROSATOM, a world leader in technology, and the EDF Group, a world leader in low-carbon energy solutions, have agreed to…
Both parties recently signed a contract to that effect. According to the document, they plan to produce hydrogen in Huntorf using renewable energy (wind power), store it, and build transportation facilities to make it accessible to industry and the mobility market.
This is part of Nespresso’s plan to minimize its own carbon footprint, with the famous coffee company striving for net zero emissions across its supply chain by 2022
Since the end of January, trucks and private cars have been able to use the first such station, which was opened by Agrola in Rothenburg. In total, Switzerland now has seven hydrogen filling stations.
Greens also want to increase the country’s hydrogen production, calling for “at least ten gigawatts of electrolysers by 2030,” which is double the amount the German government is aiming for in its hydrogen strategy.
Subscriptions
Subscribe to Updates
Get the latest news from EnergyNewsBiz about hydrogen.
