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United States grants $750 million for hydrogen projects across 24 states

The U.S. Department of Energy stated on Wednesday it is giving $750 million to jobs throughout 24 states that are constructing capability to produce and utilize tidy hydrogen.

Hydrogen is a fuel that the administration of President Joe Biden sees as vital to reducing usage of fossil fuels and cutting emissions from hard-to decarbonize industries such as aluminum and cement.

It is made by electrolyzers that divided water into hydrogen and oxygen and can be considered green if they are powered by zero-emission sources like solar, wind, nuclear or hydro.

Today the large majority of hydrogen is produced through steam methane reforming with unabated emissions, at a fraction of the expense of tidy hydrogen.

The financing for 52 tasks in states from Rhode Island to Oregon originates from the 2021 bipartisan infrastructure law. The tasks are working on six elements of the hydrogen market, consisting of research study and development on production of electrolyzers, protecting supply chains for the makers, and recycling critical products used in hydrogen production, such as iridium.

It's a truly holistic approach, Sunita Satyapal, head of the DOE's hydrogen and fuel cell technologies office, informed about the range of the jobs receiving grants. Satyapal stated the grants would help the U.S. reach its National Clean Hydrogen Technique goals, consisting of production of 10 million tonnes of tidy hydrogen each year by 2030.

Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm stated the projects will supercharge our development and guarantee our leadership in tidy hydrogen will be felt across the country for generations to come.

The grants will assist prepare for the administration's $7 billion hydrogen center program, financing of which was also consisted of in the 2021 bipartisan legislation. The administration revealed last October 7 hubs in 16 states will share the grants in an effort to stimulate the industry.

Satyapal stated the jobs should assist the U.S. improve its electrolyzer manufacturing capacity from a number of gigawatts each year to 10 GW, enough to produce an extra 1.3 million tonnes of clean hydrogen each year.

(source: Reuters)