The Hydrogen Energy Supply Chain (HESC) project will be established in Victoria thanks to a commitment of A$2.35 billion from the Japanese government through its Green Innovation Fund.
Browsing: SPOTLIGHT
The “hydrogen power bidding market system,” a crucial component of the Yoon Seok-Yeol government’s hydrogen economy program introduced last year, has sparked a lot of interest from the business community.
A landmark piece of legislation containing $369 billion in investment to combat climate change was approved by the White House in August. An important tax credit in that historic law was one for producing hydrogen in environmentally friendly ways.
The European Union is laying up a new legal framework for green hydrogen with the expectation that by 2030, electrolyzers will be widely used and connected to sources of renewable energy.
The International Energy Agency (IEA) estimates attaining net-zero targets by 2050 will require 520 million tonnes of hydrogen. This requires lots of equipment and electrolysers.
The Commission welcomes the Roadmap on hydrogen standardization published today by the European Clean Hydrogen Alliance.
The energy transition requires a lot of hydrogen. A German-New Zealand research collaboration is improving AEM electrolysis for green hydrogen production in the HighHy project.
An effective method for pyrolyzing methane to create hydrogen, which can be used in electric vehicles and power generators, has been devised by researchers at Tomsk Polytechnic University.
Green hydrogen drives decarbonization. Political ambitions match. Yet, aspirational ambitions alone will not improve the hydrogen economy. Implementation issues remain, but solutions are near.
The fact that research teams have effectively divided natural saltwater to make sustainable hydrogen has garnered attention on a global scale. Also, the seawater was not pre-treated in any way.