Denmark’s Topsoe A/S is set to invest $300 million in a US hydrogen electrolyzer factory, taking advantage of President Joe Biden’s wave of federal incentives that are luring European investment to the country.
Browsing: electrolyzers
Swedish nanotech company, Smoltek Nanotech Holding AB, has recently announced very successful test results for the company’s cell material for electrolyzers, which could bring a breakthrough for fossil-free hydrogen production.
Dana Incorporated has created metallic bipolar plates specifically designed to maximise the performance and accelerate the commercialization of proton exchange membrane (PEM) electrolyzers used to manufacture hydrogen fuel.
The third version of Tesla’s Master Plan series has been published, defining the company’s goal for moving the world and the United States towards a sustainable future fueled by renewable electricity generation sources.
A French start-up company Gen-Hy has created novel, high-performance PGM-free (platinum group metal-free) catalysts free of any rare earth metals using catalytic deposition methods on its Gen-AEM membranes for use in alkaline electrolysers.
The state of South Australia’s ambitious plan to construct a green hydrogen electrolyzer and power plant at the Whyalla steel city has closed bids.
For the creation and assembling of its ground-breaking anion exchange membrane (AEM) electrolyzer stacks for creating green hydrogen, EvolOH will construct a manufacturing facility in Massachusetts.
Globaldata estimates that the electrolyser pipeline will be above 1065 GW by the end of 2022. According to a Zawya estimate, the overall installed capacity of the world was just 300 megawatts (MW), and the total production capacity was only 2 GW globally in 2020.
According to analyst Rystad Energy, rising raw material costs could increase the cost of manufacturing PEM electrolysers this year while decreasing the cost of manufacturing alkaline machines.
The German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) has awarded funding for the project “3+2 Hyer: Development of models to boost the efficiency of hydrogen electrolysers,” which is being led by the engineering firm SEGULA Technologies.