Hydrogen could change our world, says Hexagon Purus President
As pollution has declined around the world whilst cities have been locked down to curb the spread of Covid-19, nature has hit the reset button.
As pollution has declined around the world whilst cities have been locked down to curb the spread of Covid-19, nature has hit the reset button.
Kawasaki Heavy Industries has started the sale of its hydrogen liquefier which was first developed by made-in-Japan technologies with liquefaction efficiency.
New Delhi-based The Energy and Resources Institute (TERI) sees green hydrogen as the next “clean energy prize” and is calling for industry and government in India to work together to reap the benefits.
There’s change coming in how industry is powered, not just how it embraces digitisation, with clean energies providing an alternative strand of our latest industrial revolution. And in Britain, we’re already seeing this happen, writes...
Swedish power-to-fuel company Liquid Wind has successfully raised over SEK 2.7m (€258,000) through crowdfunding to support the development of carbon neutral fuel facilities and accelerate the transition from fossil fuels.
Tasmania has developed hydrogen-related qualifications as part of a new $14m Trades and Water Centre of Excellence at TasTAFE’s Clarence campus.
ITM Power says it has a record backlog of £52.4m as the clean energy storage company this week provided a trading update.
Iceland’s largest electricity generator Landsvirkjun – the National Power Company of Iceland – wants to develop a hydrogen production facility at the 16MW Ljósifoss Hydropower Station, about 70km outside of Reykjavík.
SFC Energy has received a large-scale call-off order for its hydrogen fuel cells for installation in switch cabinets for radio tower sites in another German federal state.
Californian renewable hydrogen technology developer HyperSolar is ready to start manufacturing the first series of its Gen 1 hydrogen panels for demonstration.