United States
Simulation of PEM Electrolyzer Power Management with Renewable Generation in Owerri, Nigeria
Jan 2025
Publication
Proton exchange membrane electrolyzers are an attractive technology for hydrogen production due to their high efficiency low maintenance cost and scalability. To receive these benefits however electrolyzers require high power reliability and have relatively high demand. Due to their intermittent nature integrating renewable energy sources like solar and wind has traditionally resulted in a supply too sporadic to consistently power a proton exchange membrane electrolyzer. This study develops an electrolyzer model operating with renewable energy sources at a highly instrumented university site. The simulation uses dynamic models of photovoltaic solar and wind systems to develop models capable of responding to changing climatic and seasonal conditions. The aim therefore is to observe the feasibility of operating a proton exchange membrane system fuel cell yearround at optimal efficiency. To address the problem of feasibility with dynamic renewable generation a case study demonstrates the proposed energy management system. A site with a river onsite is chosen to ensure sufficient wind resources. Aside from assessing the feasibility of pairing renewable generation with proton exchange membrane systems this project shows a reduction in the intermittency plaguing previous designs. Finally the study quantifies the performance and effectiveness of the PEM energy management system design. Overall this study highlights the potential of proton exchange membrane electrolysis as a critical technology for sustainable hydrogen production and the importance of modeling and simulation techniques in achieving its full potential.
Barriers to Creating a Market for Hydrogen: Insights from Global Roadmaps and Stakeholders in the United States
Feb 2025
Publication
We analyze barriers to setting up a hydrogen market by using a PESTEL framework that examines political economic social technological environmental and legal barriers. This framework is advantageous for analyzing macro-environmental factors to understand potential challenges and opportunities in creating such a market. Internationally the framework was applied to analyzing barriers in 56 national hydrogen roadmaps and domestically in the U.S. to semi-structured interviews with 43 stakeholders involved with hydrogen projects across the U.S. today. In the country-level international analysis infrastructure development was the most identified barrier with 43 countries including this factor. Infrastructure development included infrastructure for hydrogen storage transportation and distribution and frequently alluded not only to the need for the infra structure but also the costs associated. The second most identified barrier was related to the need for market development - including but not limited to capital costs economic competition supply and demand matching and first-mover reticence. For the domestic analysis results from qualitative content analysis confirmed considerable variability across regions and stakeholder backgrounds. Particularly notable were divergent views about the importance of public understanding of and support for hydrogen projects with industry respondents arguing this was not important and government and academic respondents considering it very important. The barriers seen as having the largest impact on deployment of hydrogen projects was a lack of regulatory clarity and lack of decision makers’ knowledge and awareness. Domestically the most often introduced barriers were the need for the support of market demand and the need to develop a hydrogen workforce.
Review on Ammonia as a Potential Fuel: From Synthesis to Economics
Feb 2021
Publication
Ammonia a molecule that is gaining more interest as a fueling vector has been considered as a candidate to power transport produce energy and support heating applications for decades. However the particular characteristics of the molecule always made it a chemical with low if any benefit once compared to conventional fossil fuels. Still the current need to decarbonize our economy makes the search of new methods crucial to use chemicals such as ammonia that can be produced and employed without incurring in the emission of carbon oxides. Therefore current efforts in this field are leading scientists industries and governments to seriously invest efforts in the development of holistic solutions capable of making ammonia a viable fuel for the transition toward a clean future. On that basis this review has approached the subject gathering inputs from scientists actively working on the topic. The review starts from the importance of ammonia as an energy vector moving through all of the steps in the production distribution utilization safety legal considerations and economic aspects of the use of such a molecule to support the future energy mix. Fundamentals of combustion and practical cases for the recovery of energy of ammonia are also addressed thus providing a complete view of what potentially could become a vector of crucial importance to the mitigation of carbon emissions. Different from other works this review seeks to provide a holistic perspective of ammonia as a chemical that presents benefits and constraints for storing energy from sustainable sources. State-of-the-art knowledge provided by academics actively engaged with the topic at various fronts also enables a clear vision of the progress in each of the branches of ammonia as an energy carrier. Further the fundamental boundaries of the use of the molecule are expanded to real technical issues for all potential technologies capable of using it for energy purposes legal barriers that will be faced to achieve its deployment safety and environmental considerations that impose a critical aspect for acceptance and wellbeing and economic implications for the use of ammonia across all aspects approached for the production and implementation of this chemical as a fueling source. Herein this work sets the principles research practicalities and future views of a transition toward a future where ammonia will be a major energy player.
Prediction of Transient Hydrogen Flow of Proton Exchange Membrane Electrolyzer Using Artificial Neural Network
Aug 2023
Publication
A proton exchange membrane (PEM) electrolyzer is fed with water and powered by electric power to electrochemically produce hydrogen at low operating temperatures and emits oxygen as a by-product. Due to the complex nature of the performance of PEM electrolyzers the application of an artificial neural network (ANN) is capable of predicting its dynamic characteristics. A handful of studies have examined and explored ANN in the prediction of the transient characteristics of PEM electrolyzers. This research explores the estimation of the transient behavior of a PEM electrolyzer stack under various operational conditions. Input variables in this study include stack current oxygen pressure hydrogen pressure and stack temperature. ANN models using three differing learning algorithms and time delay structures estimated the hydrogen mass flow rate which had transient behavior from 0 to 1 kg/h and forecasted better with a higher count (>5) of hidden layer neurons. A coefficient of determination of 0.84 and a mean squared error of less than 0.005 were recorded. The best-fitting model to predict the dynamic behavior of the hydrogen mass flow rate was an ANN model using the Levenberg–Marquardt algorithm with 40 neurons that had a coefficient of determination of 0.90 and a mean squared error of 0.00337. In conclusion optimally fit models of hydrogen flow from PEM electrolyzers utilizing artificial neural networks were developed. Such models are useful in establishing an agile flow control system for the electrolyzer system to help decrease power consumption and increase efficiency in hydrogen generation.
Production of Hydrogen and H2/NH3 Mixtures from Ammonia at Elevated Pressures in a Cataytic Membrane Reformer
Jul 2025
Publication
Hydrogen delivery at elevated pressures is often required for fuel cell and combustion applications to improve volumetric energy density. Catalytic membrane reformers (CMRs) integrate hydrogen production and purification from reforming liquid hydrogen carriers such as ammonia enabling direct recovery of pressurized purified hydrogen. In this study high-pressure ammonia is supplied to a catalytic membrane reformer (CMR) to enhance both performance and hydrogen recovery pressures. Increasing operating pressure in the CMR resulted in nearly doubling the hydrogen flux from 17.2 to 34 sccm cm− 2 compared to our previous work. However as the recovery pressure of the permeate increased the performance notably decreased with hydrogen recovery dropping from 98 % at atmospheric pressure to 44 % at 10 bar. Nevertheless the system demonstrated rates of ammonia conversion hydrogen flux and hydrogen recovery comparable to leading literature reports when supplying ammonia at 20 bar and recovering the permeate up to 10 bar. Additionally by using ammonia as both a feed and sweep gas we demonstrate the direct production of high-pressure NH3/H2 fuel blends including a 70:30 mixture representative of natural gas without loss in CMR performance. These results highlight the potential of CMR technology to reduce hydrogen compression costs and enable on-demand generation of ammonia-derived fuel blends.
Investigation of the Suitability of Viper: Blast CFD Software for Hydrogen and Vapor Cloud Explosions
Sep 2023
Publication
Many simplified methods for estimating blast loads from a hydrogen or vapor cloud explosion are unable to take into account the accurate geometry of confining spaces obstacles or landscape that may significantly interact with the blast wave and influence the strength of blast loads. Computation fluid dynamics (CFD) software Viper::Blast which was originally developed for the simulation of the detonation of high explosives is able to quickly and easily model geometry for blast analyses however its use for vapor cloud explosions and deflagrations is not well established. This paper describes the results of an investigation into the suitability of Viper::Blast for use in modeling hydrogen deflagration and detonation events from various experiments in literature. Detonation events have been captured with a high degree of detail and relatively little uncertainty in inputs while deflagration events are significantly more complex. An approach is proposed that may allow for a reasonable bounding of uncertainty potentially leading to an approach to CFD-based Monte Carlo analyses that are able to address a problem’s true geometry while remaining reasonably pragmatic in terms of run-time and computational investment. This will allow further exploration of practical CFD application to inform hydrogen safety in the engineering design assessment and management of energy mobility and transport systems infrastructure and operations.
Examining the Nature of Two-dimensional Transverse Waves in Marginal Hydrogen Detonations using Boundary Layer Loss Modeling with Detailed Chemistry
Sep 2023
Publication
Historically it has been a challenge to simulate the experimentally observed cellular structures and marginal behavior of multidimensional hydrogen-oxygen detonations in the presence of losses even with detailed chemistry models. Very recently a quasi-two-dimensional inviscid approach was pursued where losses due to viscous boundary layers were modeled by the inclusion of an equivalent mass divergence in the lateral direction using Fay’s source term formulation with Mirels’ compressible boundary layer solutions. The same approach was used for this study along with the inclusion of thermally perfect detailed chemistry in order to capture the correct ignition sensitivity of the gas to dynamic changes in the thermodynamic state behind the detonation front. In addition the strength of transverse waves and their impact on the detonation front was investigated. Here the detailed San Diego mechanism was applied and it has been found that the detonation cell sizes can be accurately predicted without the need to prescribe specific parameters for the combustion model. For marginal cases where the detonation waves approach their failure limit quasi-stable mode behavior was observed where the number of transverse waves monotonically decreased to a single strong wave over a long enough distance. The strong transverse waves were also found to be slightly weaker than the detonation front indicating that they are not overdriven in agreement with recent studies.
Advances in Photothermal Catalysts for Solar-driven Hydrogen Production
Nov 2024
Publication
Hydrogen is increasingly recognized as a pivotal energy storage solution and a transformative alternative to conventional energy sources. This review summarizes the evolving landscape of global H2 production and consumption markets focusing on the crucial role of photothermal catalysts (PTCs) in driving Hydrogen evolution reactions (HER) particularly with regards to oxide selenide and telluride-based PTCs. Within this exploration the mechanisms of PTCs take center stage elucidating the intricacies of light absorption localized heating and catalytic activation. Essential optimization parameters ranging from temperature and irradiance to catalyst composition and pH are detailed for their paramount role in enhancing catalytic efficiency. This work comprehensively explores photothermal catalysts (PTCs) for hydrogen production by assessing their synthesis techniques and highlighting the current research gaps particularly in optimizing catalytic stability light absorption and scalability. The energy-efficient nature of oxide selenide and telluride-based PTCs makes them prime candidates for sustainable H2 production when compared to traditional materials. By analyzing a range of materials we summarize key performance metrics including hydrogen evolution rates ranging from 0.47 mmolh− 1 g− 1 for Ti@TiO2 to 22.50 mmolh− 1 g− 1 for Mn0.2Cd0.8S/NiSe2. The review concludes with a strategic roadmap aimed at enhancing PTC performance to meet the growing demand for renewable hydrogen as well as a critical literature review addressing challenges and prospects in deploying PTCs.
Modelling Flexibility Requirements in Deep Decarbonisation Scenarios: The Role of Conventional Flexibility and Sector Coupling Options in the European 2050 Energy System
Feb 2024
Publication
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has reaffirmed the importance of scaling up renewable energy to decarbonise Europe’s economy while rapidly reducing its exposure to foreign fossil fuel suppliers. Therefore the question of sources of flexibility to support a fully decarbonised European energy system is becoming even more critical in light of a renewable-dominated energy system. We developed and used a Pan-European energy system model to systematically assess and quantify sources of flexibility to meet deep decarbonisation targets. The electricity supply sector and electricity-based end-use technologies are crucial in achieving deep decarbonisation. Other low-carbon energy sources like biomethane hydrogen synthetic e-fuels and bioenergy with carbon capture and storage will also play a role. To support a fully decarbonised European energy system by 2050 both temporal and spatial flexibility will be needed. Spatial flexibility achieved through investments in national electricity networks and cross-border interconnections is crucial to support the aggressive roll-out of variable renewable energy sources. Cross-border trade in electricity is expected to increase and in deep decarbonisation scenarios the electricity transmission capacity will be larger than that of natural gas. Hydrogen storage and green hydrogen production will play a key role in providing traditional inter-seasonal flexibility and intraday flexibility will be provided by a combination of electrical energy storage hydrogen-based storage solutions (e.g. liquid H2 and pressurised storage) and hybrid heat pumps. Hydrogen networks and storage will become more critical as we move towards the highest decarbonisation scenario. Still the need for natural gas networks and storage will decrease substantially.
Recent Advances in Combustion Science Related to Hydrogen Safety
Dec 2024
Publication
Hydrogen is a key pillar in the global Net Zero strategy. Rapid scaling up of hydrogen production transport distribution and utilization is expected. This entails that hydrogen which is traditionally an industrial gas will come into proximity of populated urban areas and in some situations handled by the untrained public. To realize all their benefits hydrogen and its technologies must be safely developed and deployed. The specific properties of hydrogen involving wide flammability range low ignition energy and fast flame speed implies that any accidental release of hydrogen can be easily ignited. Comparing with conventional fuels combustion systems fueled by hydrogen are also more prone to flame instability and abnormal combustion. This paper aims to provide a comprehensive review about combustion research related to hydrogen safety. It starts with a brief introduction which includes some overview about risk analysis codes and standards. The core content covers ignition fire explosions and deflagration to detonation transition (DDT). Considering that DDT leads to detonation and that detonation may also be induced directly under special circumstances the subject of detonation is also included for completeness. The review covers laboratory medium and large-scale experiments as well as theoretical analysis and numerical simulation results. While highlights are provided at the end of each section the paper closes with some concluding remarks highlighting the achievements and key knowledge gaps.
Engineering Models for Refueling Protocol Development: Validation and Recommendations
Sep 2023
Publication
Fouad Ammouri,
Nicola Benvenuti,
Elena Vyazmina,
Vincent Ren,
Guillaume Lodier,
Quentin Nouvelot,
Thomas Guewouo,
Dorine Crouslé,
Rony Tawk,
Nicholas Hart,
Steve Mathison,
Taichi Kuroki,
Spencer Quong,
Antonio Ruiz,
Alexander Grab,
Alexander Kvasnicka,
Benoit Poulet,
Christopher Kutz and
Martin Zerta
The PRHYDE project (PRotocol for heavy duty HYDrogEn refueling) funded by the Clean Hydrogen partnership aims at developing recommendations for heavy-duty refueling protocols used for future standardization activities for trucks and other heavy duty transport systems applying hydrogen technologies. Development of a protocol requires a validated approach. Due to the limited time and budget the experimental data cannot cover the whole possible ranges of protocol parameters such as initial vehicle pressure and temperature ambient and precooling temperatures pressure ramp refueling time hardware specifications etc. Hence a validated numerical tool is essential for a safe and efficient protocol development. For this purpose engineering tools are used. They give good results in a very reasonable computation time of several seconds or minutes. These tools provide the heat parameters estimation in the gas (volume average temperature) and 1D temperature distribution in the tank wall. The following models were used SOFIL (Air Liquide tool) HyFill (by ENGIE) and H2Fills (open access code by NREL). The comparison of modelling results and experimental data demonstrated a good capability of codes to predict the evolution of average gas temperature in function of time. Some recommendations on model validation for the future protocol development are given.
Integration of Underground Green Hydrogen Storage in Hybrid Energy Generation
May 2024
Publication
One of the major challenges in harnessing energy from renewable sources like wind and solar is their intermittent nature. Energy production from these sources can vary based on weather conditions and time of day making it essential to store surplus energy for later use when there is a shortfall. Energy storage systems play a crucial role in addressing this intermittency issue and ensuring a stable and reliable energy supply. Green hydrogen sourced from renewables emerges as a promising solution to meet the rising demand for sustainable energy addressing the depletion of fossil fuels and environmental crises. In the present study underground hydrogen storage in various geological formations (aquifers depleted hydrocarbon reservoirs salt caverns) is examined emphasizing the need for a detailed geological analysis and addressing potential hazards. The paper discusses challenges associated with underground hydrogen storage including the requirement for extensive studies to understand hydrogen interactions with microorganisms. It underscores the importance of the issue with a focus on reviewing the the various past and present hydrogen storage projects and sites as well as reviewing the modeling studies in this field. The paper also emphasizes the importance of incorporating hybrid energy systems into hydrogen storage to overcome limitations associated with standalone hydrogen storage systems. It further explores the past and future integrations of underground storage of green hydrogen within this dynamic energy landscape.
Hydrogen Station Prognostics and Health Monitoring Model
Aug 2023
Publication
Hydrogen fuel has shown promise as a clean alternative fuel aiding in the reduction of fossil fuel dependence within the transportation sector. However hydrogen refueling stations and infrastructure remains a barrier and are a prerequisite for consumer adoption of low-cost and low-emission fuel cell electric vehicles (FCEVs). The costs for FCEV fueling include both station capital costs and operation and maintenance (O&M) costs. Contributing to these O&M costs unscheduled maintenance is presently more costly and more frequent than for similar gasoline fueling infrastructure and is asserted to be a limiting factor in achieving FCEV customer acceptance and cost parity. Unscheduled maintenance leads to longer station downtime therefore causing an increase in missed fueling opportunities which forces customers to seek refueling at other operable stations that may be significantly farther away. This research proposes a framework for a hydrogen station prognostics health monitoring (H2S PHM) model that can minimize unexpected downtime by predicting the remaining useful life for primary hydrogen station components within the major station subsystems. The H2S PHM model is a data-driven statistical model based on O&M data collected from 34 retail hydrogen stations located in the U.S. The primary subcomponents studied are the dispenser compressor and chiller. The remaining useful life calculations are used to decide whether or not maintenance should be completed based on the prediction and expected future station use. This paper presents the background method and results for the H2S PHM model as for a means for improving station availability and customer confidence in FCEVs and hydrogen infrastructure
A Perspective on Broad Deployment of Hydrogen-fueled Vehicles for Ground Freight Transportation with a Comparison to Electric Vehicles
Oct 2024
Publication
The pressing global challenge of climate change necessitates a concerted effort to limit greenhouse gas emissions particularly carbon dioxide. A critical pathway is to replace fossil fuel sources by electrification including transportation. While electrification of light-duty vehicles is rapidly expanding the heavy-duty vehicle sector is subject to challenges notably the logistical drawbacks of the size and weight of high-capacity batteries required for range as well as the time for battery charging. This Perspective highlights the potential of hydrogen fuel-cell vehicles as a viable alternative for heavy-duty road transportation. We evaluate the implications of hydrogen integration into the freight economy energy dynamics and CO2 mitigation and envision a roadmap for a holistic energy transition. Our critical opinion presented in this Perspective is that federal incentives to produce hydrogen could foster growth in the nascent hydrogen economy. The pathway that we propose is that initial focus on operators of large fleets that could control their own fueling infrastructure. This opinion was formed from private discussions with numerous stakeholders during the formation of one of the awarded hydrogen hubs if they focus on early adopters that could leverage the hydrogen supply chain.
Overview of International Activities in Hydrogen System Safety in IEA Hydrogen TCP Task 43
Sep 2023
Publication
Safety and reliability have long been recognized as key issues for the development commercialization and implementation of new technologies and infrastructure and hydrogen systems are no exception to this rule. Reliability engineering quantitative risk assessment (QRA) and knowledge exchange each play a key role in proactive addressing safety – before problems happen – and help us learn from problems if they happen. Many international research activities are focusing on both reliability and risk assessment for hydrogen systems. However the element of knowledge exchange is sometimes less visible. To support international collaboration and knowledge exchange the International Energy Agency (IEA) convened a new Technology Collaboration Program “Task 43: Safety and Regulatory Aspects of Emerging Large Scale Hydrogen Energy Applications” started in June 2022. Within Task 43 Subtask E focuses on Hydrogen Systems Safety. This paper discusses the structure of the Hydrogen Systems Safety subtask and the aligned activities and introduces opportunities for future work.
Methodology for Consequence-based Setback Distance Calculations for Bulk Liquid Hydrogen Storage Systems
Sep 2023
Publication
Updates to the separation distances between different exposures and bulk liquid hydrogen systems are included in the 2023 version of NFPA 2: Hydrogen Technologies Code. This work details the models and calculations leading to those distances. The specific models used including the flow of liquid hydrogen through an orifice within the Hydrogen Plus Other Alternative Fuels Risk Assessment Models (HyRAM+) toolkit are described and discussed to emphasize challenges specific to liquid hydrogen systems. Potential hazards and harm affecting individual exposures (e.g. ignition sources air intakes) for different unignited concentrations overpressures and heat flux levels were considered and exposures were grouped into three bins. For each group the distances to a specific hazard criteria (e.g. heat flux level) for a characteristic leak size informed by a risk-analysis led to a hazard distance. The maximum hazard distance within each group was selected to determine a table of separation distances based on internal pressure and pipe size rather than storage volume similar to the bulk gaseous separation distance tables in NFPA 2. The new separation distances are compared to the previous distances and some implications of the updated distances are given.
Social Risk Approach for Assessing Public Safety of Large-scale Hydrogen Systems
Sep 2023
Publication
Social risk is a comprehensive concept that considers not only internal/external physical risks but also risks (which are multiple varied and diverse) associated with social activity. It should be considered from diverse perspectives and requires a comprehensive evaluation framework that takes into account the synergistic impact of each element on others rather than evaluating each risk individually. Social risk assessment is an approach that is not limited to internal system risk from an engineering perspective but also considers the stakeholders development stage and societal readiness and resilience to change. This study aimed to introduce a social risk approach to assess the public safety of large-scale hydrogen systems. Guidelines for comprehensive social risk assessment were developed to conduct appropriate risk assessments for advanced science and technology activities with high uncertainties to predict major impacts on society before an accident occurs and to take measures to mitigate the damage and to ensure good governance are in place to facilitate emergency response and recovery in addition to preventive measures. In a case study this approach was applied to a hydrogen refueling station in Japan and risk-based multidisciplinary approaches were introduced. These approaches can be an effective supporting tool for social implementation with respect to large-scale hydrogen systems such as liquefied hydrogen storage tanks. The guidelines for social risk assessment of large-scale hydrogen systems are under the International Energy Agency Technology Collaboration Program Hydrogen Safety Task 43. This study presents potential case studies of social risk assessment for large-scale hydrogen systems for future.
Evaluating Reservoir Suitability for Large-scale Hydrogen Storage: A Preliminary Assesment Considering Reservoir Properties
May 2024
Publication
With rising demand for clean energy global focus turns to finding ideal sites for large-scale underground hydrogen storage (UHS) in depleted petroleum reservoirs. A thorough preliminary reservoir evaluation before hydrogen (H2) injection is crucial for UHS success and safety. Recent criteria for UHS often emphasize economics and chemistry neglecting key reservoir attributes. This study introduces a comprehensive framework for the reservoir-scale preliminary assessment specifically tailored for long-term H2 storage within depleted gas reservoirs. The evaluation criteria encompass critical components including reservoir geometry petrophysical properties tectonics and formation fluids. To illustrate the practical application of this approach we assess the Barnett shale play reservoir parameters. The assessment unfolds through three key stages: (1) A systematic evaluation of the reservoir's properties against our comprehensive screening criteria determines its suitability for H2 storage. (2) Using both homogeneous and multilayered gas reservoir models we explore the feasibility and efficiency of H2 storage. This phase involves an in-depth examination of reservoir behavior during the injection stage. (3) To enhance understanding of UHS performance sensitivity analyses investigate the impact of varying reservoir dimensions and injection/production pressures. The findings reveal the following: (a) Despite potential challenges associated with reservoir compaction and aquifer support the reservoir exhibits substantial promise as an H2 storage site. (b) Notably a pronounced increase in reservoir pressure manifests during the injection stage particularly in homogeneous reservoirs. (c) Furthermore optimizing injection-extraction cycle efficiency can be achieved by augmenting reservoir dimensions while maintaining a consistent thickness. To ensure a smooth transition to implementation further comprehensive investigations are advised including experimental and numerical studies to address injectivity concerns and explore storage site development. This evaluation framework is a valuable tool for assessing the potential of depleted gas reservoirs for large-scale hydrogen storage advancing global eco-friendly energy systems.
Market Dynamics and Power Risks in Green Technology Materials: Platinum under the EU 2030 Hydrogen Target
Jan 2025
Publication
The central role of hydrogen in the EU’s decarbonization strategy has increased the importance of critical raw materials. To address this the EU has taken legislative steps including the 2023 Critical Raw Materials Act (CRMA) to ensure a stable supply. Using a leader–follower Stackelberg game framework this study analyzes CRM market dynamics integrating CRMA compliance through rules on sourcing and stockpiling value chain resilience via the inclusion of supply diversification strategies and geopolitical influences by modeling exporter behaviors and trade dependencies. Results highlight the potential for strategic behavior by major exporters stressing the benefits of diversifying export sources and maintaining strategic stockpiles to stabilize supply. The findings provide insights into the EU’s efforts to secure CRM supplies key to achieving decarbonization goals and fostering a sustainable energy transition. Future research should explore alternative cost-reduction strategies mitigate exporter market power and evaluate the implications for pricing mechanisms market outcomes and consumer welfare
Everything About Hydrogen Podcast: Decarbonizing Shipping
Mar 2024
Publication
On this episode of EAH Patrick Molloy Alicia Eastman and Chris Jackson are delighted to speak with Arsenio Dominguez the newly appointed Secretary General of the International Maritime Organization (IMO). Recorded before the highly successful MEPC81 Arsenio describes his vision for the IMO and his confidence in solutions that will reduce emissions from shipping without penalizing member states.
The podcast can be found on their website.
The podcast can be found on their website.
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