Thank you, A question to consider. Assuming you found the technology to strike it rich tomorrow - what would you do with all this abundant cheap hydrogen? You could build some electricity power stations over the source but hydrogen is not easily transported or stored and pretty useless and impractical for fueling vehicles. Moreover, unless burnt in a fuel cell, its combustion products produce greenhouse gasses like NOx so it's not ideal. Electric vehicles seem to offer far more promise.
Hi! It depends on the individual situation. At this point, we counted about 12-15 industries practically screaming for affordable, carbon-neutral source of hydrogen - apart from the very appealing concept of local power generation, allowing the users to go off the grid. The off-takers may vary case-to-case but the beauty is: we are able to find natural hydrogen as close to the consumer as it is practical, to eliminate the need for long-haul transportation.
Thank you,
A question to consider.
Assuming you found the technology to strike it rich tomorrow - what would you do with all this abundant cheap hydrogen? You could build some electricity power stations over the source but hydrogen is not easily transported or stored and pretty useless and impractical for fueling vehicles. Moreover, unless burnt in a fuel cell, its combustion products produce greenhouse gasses like NOx so it's not ideal. Electric vehicles seem to offer far more promise.
Hi! It depends on the individual situation. At this point, we counted about 12-15 industries practically screaming for affordable, carbon-neutral source of hydrogen - apart from the very appealing concept of local power generation, allowing the users to go off the grid. The off-takers may vary case-to-case but the beauty is: we are able to find natural hydrogen as close to the consumer as it is practical, to eliminate the need for long-haul transportation.