WWU plans to produce hydrogen from contaminated wastewater sources
Wales and West Utilities (WWU) will develop an electrolyser designed to be capable of producing green hydrogen from highly contaminated industrial wastewater sources.
As we enter the summer break for many, it’s been a polarising start to the second half of 2024. While we’ve seen ground-breaking projects, technological developments and more political drive on hydrogen, we’ve also witnessed high amounts of struggle.
Wales and West Utilities (WWU) will develop an electrolyser designed to be capable of producing green hydrogen from highly contaminated industrial wastewater sources.
Aran Bates, CEO and co-founder of Hydrologiq, tells the story of how the company powered a film shoot with hydrogen, in what proved to be one of the company’s most challenging, yet fruitful projects to...
H2 View understands that the Indonesian Government is aiming to invest up to $25.2bn into the green hydrogen sector by 2060.
The Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority will begin introducing hydrogen-powered buses to its fleet before the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games.
Against the backdrop of Ørsted’s decision to axe its hydrogen-based e-fuels project, due to a lack of offtake, H2 View asks, where will the demand for electrolytic hydrogen be?
British startup DRIFT Energy has secured funding to enable the development of a sailing vessel that can harness deep ocean wind to produce green hydrogen at sea.
Engineering solutions provider Technica has launched a new company dedicated to the energy industry, with a focus on the hydrogen and carbon capture economies.
Proton Motor Director of Investor Relations & Communications, Manfred Limbrunner, told H2 View, decentralised hydrogen fuel cell applications can bridge the current hydrogen infrastructure gap, while also delivering sustainable energy without straining the grid.
Hydrexia LLC will jointly develop and deploy its hydrogen technologies in South America as part of a strategic partnership with GH2 Global.
Celadyne will begin developing fuel cell systems for hydrogen-powered heavy-duty systems after it secured funding from the US Department of Energy (DOE).