Brazil pledges $1.09bn for clean hydrogen hubs
The Brazilian Government has made R$6bn ($1.09bn) available to support the development of clean hydrogen hubs that will decarbonise hard-to-abate sectors.
The Brazilian Government has made R$6bn ($1.09bn) available to support the development of clean hydrogen hubs that will decarbonise hard-to-abate sectors.
In what many hoped to be a year of action for hydrogen in the US, industry players remain anxiously awaiting the final rules that will define their developments and operations for at least the next...
“This is a win-win partnership for Brazil and Europe,” claimed Ludmila Nascimento, Director of Energy and Decarbonization at Vale.
HIF Global has secured a land reservation contract with the Port of Açu in Brazil to develop an 800,000 tonne per year hydrogen-based e-methanol facility.
Stephen B. Harrison from sbh4 consulting outlines how green hydrogen and ammonia projects can be de-risked with ultrapure water investments.
The Hydrogen Council’s latest Hydrogen Insights report delivered some much-needed positivity for the industry, whilst also bringing an equally needed sense of reality.
Final investment decisions (FIDs) on clean hydrogen projects have surged by 90% since last October, but a $335bn financing gap might have put 2030 ambitions out of reach, according to the Hydrogen Council’s latest report.
“Low-carbon energy sources are set to grow, but not currently fast enough to meet Net Zero goals due to business case viability and other challenges,” the report reads.
To ensure that hydrogen remains safe, gas detectors and flame detectors are used as the primary tools among many layers of a detection system, writes Cristin Krause, Global Marketing Manager at Dräger Safety.
The real challenge lies in transforming electrolyser manufacturing from an industrial batch process into a streamlined, scalable operation, writes Leanne Halliday, LRQA Territory Manager for Oceania.