- OMV Secures €123M in State-Backed Support for 140 MW Green Hydrogen Project in Austria
- LyondellBasell Repositions Its Petrochemical Portfolio Around Circular Plastics and Low-Carbon Materials
- Donut Lab Launches First Commercially Available All-Solid-State Battery for Electric Vehicles
- China Brings Second Hualong One Reactor Online at Zhangzhou Nuclear Plant
Browsing: Research
Hydrogen has colossal potential to assist conclusion our dependence on fossil fills and guarantee a effective move to net-zero emanations by 2050.
The steel pipelines introduced within the German gas organize are appropriate for transporting hydrogen.
South Africa has the natural and technological resources to dominate green hydrogen generation globally.
Researchers at RMIT University have created a less expensive and more energy-efficient method of producing hydrogen straight from seawater.
South Africa is experiencing a continuing energy crisis, and with no end in sight, it is time to consider extending the country’s present alternative energy sources.
A research team at the Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin (HZB) Centre for Solar Fuels is looking at another route to emissions-free hydrogen production, dubbed the “direct” approach.
Thermalytica’s super insulating substance improves liquid hydrogen shipping and storage
Japan-based Thermalytica invented a super insulating material that makes shipping and storing liquid hydrogen more efficient and cost-effective.
The fuel could account for up to one-fifth of energy demand by 2050, according to a new study that weighs the risks and benefits of mining businesses switching to the usage of green hydrogen. This means that the transition could help corporations bring in new income.
The Netherlands may face serious repercussions if hydrogen does truly replace other energy sources in the future as planned. This will result in the transportation of extremely huge amounts of poisonous ammonia, which is required to create hydrogen, across the nation, among other things.
A flowline jumper failure that led to a subsea leak in the Gulf of Mexico in 2020, according to a U.S. Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement (BSEE) study, was brought on by hydrogen embrittlement.
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