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US EPA anticipated to drop hydrogen from power plant guideline, sources say

The Biden administration is anticipated to drop green hydrogen from its landmark plan to slash greenhouse gas emissions from the power sector, to minimize the risk of claims if the nascent innovation doesn't reach commercial scale, according to three sources acquainted with the matter.

The move reflects uncertainty within the U.S. government that the technology-- in which hydrogen fuel is extracted from water utilizing zero-emissions energy sources like wind and solar - will develop rapidly enough to become a considerable tool to decarbonize the electricity market.

The Epa (EPA) will unveil its last rule as soon as Thursday, the sources stated, marking a substantial turning point in President Joe Biden's strategy to fight environment modification.

The EPA did not respond to a request for comment.

E&E News was very first to report that the EPA was thinking about the change.

The EPA's initial power plant proposition had set requirements that would push fossil fuel power plant operators to either also usage super-low-emissions hydrogen to sustain their plants, or install carbon capture and sequestration (CCS) technology to siphon the CO2 from a plant's smokestack.

Dropping the use of hydrogen could reinforce the rule legally, the sources stated. Challengers of the plan had warned that the innovation may not be commercially viable when rules kick in in 2030 for gas plants and 2032 for coal plants.

The power plant rule is among a raft of guidelines the administration is looking for to finalize in the coming weeks to protect them from prospective turnaround under the Congressional Review Act ought to former President Donald Trump win the November election.

The CRA enables a newly chosen Congress to examine and reverse laws that were just recently created.

The EPA last month narrowed the scope of the power plant regulation by getting rid of existing gas plants from the requirements, after pushback from energies that called the initial proposition impracticable.

(source: Reuters)