Forget Cars, Green Hydrogen Will Supercharge Crops

Australia News News

Forget Cars, Green Hydrogen Will Supercharge Crops
Australia Latest News,Australia Headlines
  • 📰 WIRED
  • ⏱ Reading Time:
  • 69 sec. here
  • 3 min. at publisher
  • 📊 Quality Score:
  • News: 31%
  • Publisher: 51%

A massive solar photovoltaic and battery installation is being built in Western Australia to power a 10-megawatt electrolyzer that will produce green hydrogen. Combine the hydrogen with nitrogen — and you've got fertilizer for crops. Via WIREDUK

In the dry, red dust of Western Australia’s vast Pilbara region, something green is growing. In October 2022, construction began on a massive solar photovoltaic and battery installation, around 40 soccer fields in size, that will soon power a 10-megawatt electrolyzer—a machine that uses electricity to convert water into hydrogen. But that hydrogen isn’t going to fuel cars or trucks or buses: It’s going to grow crops.

Given the long-running conversation about hydrogen-fueled vehicles, fertilizer probably isn’t the first thing that comes to mind when thinking about green hydrogen. But in the past few years, the discussion around the fuel has shifted and broadened as more industries see this zero-carbon fuel’s potential to decarbonize carbon-intensive industrial processes and sectors.of global greenhouse gas emissions.

That is an exciting prospect for Yara, which is the largest ammonia producer in the world. “The concept of green ammonia was first slated to us probably back in 2014,” says Leigh Holder, business development director for Yara Clean Ammonia in Australia. “It was viewed with a lot of skepticism back then, and a lot of that had to do with the cost of renewables.”

Now the price of renewable energy from sources such as wind and solar has plummeted, bringing green hydrogen within economic reach for a huge range of potential applications. Perhaps surprisingly, hydrogen-fueled passenger transport is not top of the list, says Fredrik Mowill, CEO of Hystar, a major manufacturer of proton exchange membrane electrolyzers for the production of green hydrogen.

He says large-scale industrial applications—like the Yuri Project—are what will really drive demand. “A company like Yara will need enormous amounts of green hydrogen,” he says.

We have summarized this news so that you can read it quickly. If you are interested in the news, you can read the full text here. Read more:

WIRED /  🏆 555. in US

Australia Latest News, Australia Headlines

Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.

Floatable photocatalytic hydrogel nanocomposites for large-scale solar hydrogen production - Nature NanotechnologyFloatable photocatalytic hydrogel nanocomposites for large-scale solar hydrogen production - Nature NanotechnologyFloatable hydrogel nanocomposites, with facile intercalation of various photocatalysts, effectively produce hydrogen. The easily scalable nature of the nanocomposites demonstrates the practical application of this new type of photocatalytic platform.
Read more »

Nikola Insists on Sticking with Hydrogen Fuel-Cell Truck PlansNikola Insists on Sticking with Hydrogen Fuel-Cell Truck PlansTrying to forget its founder’s legal troubles, Nikola banks on zero-emission trucks and the hydrogen to fuel them. “Of course, it would be easier if we didn’t have the baggage from the past.”
Read more »

Motor Mouth: Why hydrogen might be the simple solution to ICE emissionsMotor Mouth: Why hydrogen might be the simple solution to ICE emissionsA Canadian company is mixing hydrogen with diesel and finding that far fewer emissions come out the tailpipe
Read more »

Forget tiny homes — it's all about barndominiums nowMove aside, tiny homes: The barndominium is the hottest thing in alternative housing, and it shows just how much the pandemic has changed what people look for in a home
Read more »

The surprising thing about San Francisco's drug centers champions forgetThe surprising thing about San Francisco's drug centers champions forgetU.S. advocates of supervised drug-use sites may be surprised to learn that the 'European model' they embrace seeks to end drug dependency as well.
Read more »

'I Will Never Forget His Face,' Says Tortured Gitmo Detainee After DeSantis Denies Encounter'He was laughing and smiling watching me being tortured on the force-feeding chair,' MansoorAdayfi said after Florida's GOP governor scorned a reporter's question.
Read more »



Render Time: 2025-02-27 01:43:11