Plan Hydrogène
Hydrogen energy in France has visibly taken a big step forward in recent years, embraced as the sector unifying vector and increasingly prevalent in the country’s mobility plans in particular.
Hydrogen energy in France has visibly taken a big step forward in recent years, embraced as the sector unifying vector and increasingly prevalent in the country’s mobility plans in particular.
At a time when the UK Government has pledged that greenhouse gas emissions will reach ‘net zero’ by 2050, the need for new sustainable energy sources is ever more urgent.
Driving in Germany is perhaps best known for the absence of speed restrictions on parts of the German Autobahn network. And German car makers are renowned for their top-tier luxury brands. More recently, there has...
Until now, the biggest challenge preventing hydrogen energy from going mainstream has been its price tag. Although it has been effectively used to produce energy for various applications for over a hundred years, the costs...
The race is on to decarbonise, among others, the domestic heating sector. Rob Cockerill explains why the arrival of Worcester Bosch’s new hydrogen-ready boiler means the timer is on for our conventional boiler installations.
“Welcome to the church,” someone said to me when I was working on the first footings of H2 View early last year. As we have seen again today here in Paris, that church continues to...
The momentum for hydrogen energy and the flourishing value chain only continues to grow, and seldom is there such evidence of this in one building as there has been today at the HyVolution 2020 event...
In many areas Britain is already leading the world, writes Rob Dale, but urgent action is required to bring further clarity to the UK hydrogen roadmap and visibly leading it.
An interview with leading automotive supplier Plastic Omnium, by Rob Cockerill
Changing public perception of hydrogen energy will not be achieved overnight, but recent announcements from Cadent and Worcester Bosch offer encouraging signs of bridging the disconnect, writes Rob Cockerill.