- ATOME’s Paraguay FID Tests Commercial Viability of Green Hydrogen Fertilizer at Scale
- Japan Targets Resource Security With ¥1 Trillion Circular Economy Push Focused on Critical Materials and Plastics
- Netherlands Targets Hydrogen Skills Gap With Regional Learning Ecosystems Backed by National Growth Fund
- Distribution Grids Emerge as Critical Bottleneck and Enabler in Global Energy Transition
Browsing: SPOTLIGHT
Prasanta Sarkar made the decision to stay behind and work on a problem while on a lengthy backpacking trip through India. He joined Entrepreneur First and immediately clicked with Rochan Sinha. They jointly established Newtrace in 2020 to create a new category of “membrane-less” electrolyzers and to make a dent in the market for “green hydrogen,” which at the moment only accounts for a tiny fraction of the 6 to 7 million tonnes of hydrogen produced in the nation each year, all from fossil fuels.
The broad alliance attempting to quicken the port of Rotterdam-based importation of hydrogen from Australia has grown stronger.
In a recent interview with EnergyNews, Seky Chang, a Korean transportation expert, discussed how he has concentrated on developing hydrogen-based transportation solutions.
A German project to increase the use of clean energy for home heating is on track to heat certain homes in the southwest of the nation with 30% “green” energy blended with natural gas in the coming weeks, according to the project’s sponsor.
A Green Hydrogen Esslingen project demonstrates how energy-intensive green hydrogen production must be coordinated across industries in order to be commercially viable, including waste heat recovery, natural gas replacement, and energy-efficient operation.
More than 100 German companies have teamed up and aim to invest more than 10 billion euros.
Wind turbines in the North Sea near Germany might generate one million tons of hydrogen. This ambitious proposal involves over 100 German corporations investing over 10 billion euros.
Paris is enraged that Berlin and Madrid have not endorsed its intention to have EU law designate hydrogen produced using nuclear power as “green.”
Hydrogen-natural gas blends could boost energy transition, University of Alberta expert says
According to a University of Alberta expert in hydrogen energy, using a combination of natural gas and hydrogen to heat houses might reduce carbon emissions by as much as 5% without requiring changes to the current infrastructure.
By the end of the year, the capacity for producing hydrogen is predicted to increase by 165% from 2022 to 4.5 million tons per year (mtpa) globally, according to GlobalData, a top provider of data and analytics.
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