Editor’s outlook: The five big questions we’ll be asking in 2025
If this industry wants to find its path to success, it must begin answering the tough questions, writes H2 View Editor, Charlie Currie.
If this industry wants to find its path to success, it must begin answering the tough questions, writes H2 View Editor, Charlie Currie.
Surely we can’t keep publishing reports about the state of play and the FID barrier, whilst clinging to (very) marginal gains, writes Rob Cockerill, Global Content Director at gasworld and H2 View.
Innovation is essential in hydrogen’s future. But we also need to temper our expectations so that we are not waiting for the ‘perfect’ and never deploying the ‘good enough’, writes Dr. David Hart, Global Hydrogen...
Globally, key players are looking to the US for leadership, and we must rise to the opportunities and the challenges, says Frank Wolak, President and CEO of the Fuel Cell & Hydrogen Energy Association (FCHEA).
It is evident that expectation management is part of the challenge for hydrogen in Australia, both for hydrogen uses and for time, writes Dr. Fiona Simon, CEO of the Australian Hydrogen Council (AHC).
With ambitious investment into clean technologies, the simplification of regulations and the preservation of a European manufacturing base, it can put us on the path to Net Zero and a sustainable society which benefits all...
As we stand at the threshold of 2025, the urgency to transition to clean power has never been more palpable, writes Clare Jackson, CEO of Hydrogen UK.
Whilst winter is often fondly associated with freshly fallen snow caressing the base of trees draped in shimmering crystal, this hydrogen winter is more reminiscent of the still, dark quietness of winter, writes Ravin Mirchandani,...
Nathan Snoke, Global Hydrogen Account Manager at Halliburton, tells H2 View, how he hopes to see both hydrogen and Halliburton “achieve widespread global adoption of underground hydrogen storage.”
We must re-think the decarbonisation investment paradigm. It is not the ‘greenest’ projects that will get large-scale investment, only the ‘best’ projects will be bankable, writes Stephen B. Harrison of sbh4 consulting.