New Ceramic Reactor Tackles Hydrogen Recycling & Industrial Decarbonization
Ceramic cells are the key to a new, non-electric reactor-based system for producing hydrogen from biogas, RNG, and industrial waste gases.
Ceramic cells are the key to a new, non-electric reactor-based system for producing hydrogen from biogas, RNG, and industrial waste gases.
Offshore wind farms don’t require an onshore grid connection, if they can produce green hydrogen efficiently and economically.
After decades of foot-dragging by petrochemical stakeholders, solutions to the ocean plastic pollution crisis are beginning to emerge.
The US green hydrogen industry gets a leg up from rare bipartisan legislation aimed at cutting costs and increasing production.
Toyota and Kohler have developed a new commercial scale fuel cell system aimed at pushing diesel generators out of the market for backup power while offering new grid services, too.
Renault is banking on hydrogen electric fuel cell vans to grab a foothold in Europe, where interest in fuel cell mobility is picking up.
A gigantic new green hydrogen plant in the Netherlands will help the European Union finally free itself from Russian gas, once and for all.
Captured carbon can yield carbon nanofibers and green hydrogen, too, which could be a better solution than simply pushing it underground.
Perovskites have already made their mark on the solar industry, and now attention is turning to green hydrogen production.
Amazon and Walmart have caught the hydrogen-powered electric forklift bug, and now they are moving on up to fuel cell trucks.