- Analyst Insight

Pacific Northwest Hydrogen Hub Moves Into Phase 1 Development After Receiving DOE Grant

The Pacific Northwest Hydrogen Association, a multi-state nonprofit organization focused on creating a robust network of clean hydrogen suppliers and end users in the Pacific Northwest, has received Phase 1 award status from the Department of Energy. PNWH2 is one of the first regional clean hydrogen hubs to begin the four-phase development plan.
- Analyst Insight

Biden Administration Picks 7 Hydrogen Hub Proposals to Receive up to $7 Billion in Funding

Seven proposals for regional clean hydrogen hubs have been selected to receive up to $7 billion in funding, the Biden administration said October 13. The hubs are intended to accelerate the commercial-scale deployment of low-cost clean hydrogen. The funding was included as part of 2021’s Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, better known as the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law.
- Blog

Gulf Coast Highway, Part 2 - The Houston Area's Case for Becoming a DOE-Backed Hydrogen Hub

Author Housley Carr

It took many decades to build out the U.S.’s natural gas production, processing and transportation infrastructure, and just as long to develop demand for natgas — the many millions of residential, commercial, industrial and power-generation customers that now depend on U.S. gas, both domestically and, more recently, internationally as well. Now, with action on both climate change and energy security top of mind, there’s a big push to add clean hydrogen to the energy mix as quickly as possible, as evidenced by the Department of Energy’s plan to invest up to $8 billion in the development of four or more “hydrogen hubs.” This time, we won’t have decades to build out the clean hydrogen supply, demand and infrastructure that will be needed to make a real difference — and that’s precisely the point being made by the folks in and around Houston, who assert that the region has just what it takes to get a consequential hydrogen hub up and running. In today’s RBN blog, we continue our look at the federal government’s push to advance clean hydrogen and the Houston-led effort to make the western Gulf Coast a center of hydrogen-related activity.

- Blog

Gulf Coast Highway - Greater Houston's Vision for a Texas-Louisiana Hydrogen Hub

Author Housley Carr

One of the biggest, most important steps in the U.S.’s ongoing energy transition will be the selection and build-out of at least four new clean hydrogen hubs –– development supported to a significant degree by an $8 billion commitment in last year’s bipartisan infrastructure bill, which was signed into law by President Biden in November. Surely there will be a lot of angling among states and regions to land big chunks of that federal money, but it’s a safe bet that one of the new hydrogen hubs will be located along the Texas-Louisiana coast. After all, this stretch of low-lying land not only boasts the U.S.’s highest concentration of existing hydrogen production and consumption, it also offers an extensive network of hydrogen pipelines, easy access to vast amounts of natural gas and renewable power, scores of potential sites for underground hydrogen storage and carbon sequestration, and a slew of marine terminals for exporting hydrogen-packed ammonia to global markets. Best of all, perhaps, the region has the human capital to make a new energy hub happen — heck, look at the infrastructure and markets the folks and companies between Freeport and Lake Charles have already developed for crude oil, natural gas and NGLs. In today’s RBN blog, we begin a detailed look at the federal government’s push to advance clean hydrogen as a fuel of the future and the Houston-led effort to make the western Gulf Coast a buzzing center of hydrogen-related activity.