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University of Texas Launches New Hydrogen Research Project

By April 24, 2024 5   min read  (912 words)

April 24, 2024 |

2024 04 24 12 02 47
  • Groundbreaking H2@Scale Project Unveils Hydrogen Proto-Hub
  • First-of-its-kind facility will foster innovation in the production and deployment of low-carbon hydrogen

Frontier Energy, Inc., GTI Energy, and the Center for Electromechanics at The University of Texas at Austin, today hosted the grand opening of a hydrogen research and demonstration facility. It was developed as part of the “Demonstration and Framework for H2@Scale in Texas and Beyond” project, supported by the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Hydrogen and Fuel Cell Technologies Office. This first-of-its-kind hydrogen proto-hub is a significant leap forward in the clean hydrogen economy.

More than twenty industry stakeholders and sponsors are involved in this effort, which will showcase technology needed to expand hydrogen’s role in decarbonization while also raising awareness of hydrogen as a clean energy source.

The facility will generate zero-carbon hydrogen using water electrolysis powered by solar and wind energy, as well as steam methane reformation of renewable natural gas from a Texas landfill. The hydrogen will power a stationary fuel cell for clean, reliable power for the Texas Advanced Computing Center and supply zero-emission fuel to a fleet of Toyota Mirai fuel cell electric vehicles and to fuel cell drones. This approach marks the first time that multiple renewable hydrogen supplies and multiple end uses have been networked at a single location to demonstrate a scalable, economical hydrogen ecosystem.

Launched in 2020, the H2@Scale project aims to develop and demonstrate paths to renewable hydrogen as a clean and cost-effective fuel. The facility is both a unique academic research center, as well as a model for future large-scale hydrogen deployments, showcasing a fully integrated hydrogen ecosystem that includes production, distribution, storage, and end-use.

As part of the project, a recently released study, “A Framework for Hydrogen in Texas,” highlights Texas’ strong position for clean hydrogen production. The state’s existing hydrogen infrastructure and abundant wind and solar resources make it a prime candidate to help meet the world’s hydrogen demand.

“We launched the H2@Scale initiative with our labs years ago to pave the way for pilot projects that help advance both clean hydrogen innovation and scale up,” said Dr. Sunita Satyapal, Director, DOE Hydrogen and Fuel Cell Technologies Office and Hydrogen Program Coordinator. “I am so pleased to see this project underway to help guide future larger scale clean hydrogen deployments and make progress on America’s clean hydrogen strategy.”

“H2@Scale isn’t just about producing low-carbon energy, it’s about creating clean energy growth opportunities for communities throughout Texas and the nation,” said Adam Walburger, President, Frontier Energy. “By harnessing renewable energy resources to create zero-carbon hydrogen, we can power homes, businesses, transportation, and agriculture – all while creating jobs and reducing emissions.”

“Through public-private partnerships enabled by H2@Scale, DOE continues to build on its role as an accelerator for the collaborative early-stage research, development, and demonstrations needed for effective energy system transitions,” said Paula Gant, President and CEO, GTI Energy. “By demonstrating a fully integrated hydrogen ecosystem, H2@Scale is a proving ground for the powerful potential of large-scale Regional Clean Hydrogen Hubs in building a robust hydrogen economy in ways that benefit local communities whether through skilled job creation, cleaner air or strengthened energy access.”

H2@Scale in Texas builds on nearly two decades of UT leadership in hydrogen research and development. With this facility, we aim to provide the educated workforce and the engineering data needed for success, said Michael Lewis, Research Scientist, UT Austin Center for Electromechanics. “Beyond the current project, the hydrogen research facility is well-positioned for growth and impact in the emerging clean hydrogen industry.”

Participants in the DOE-funded HyVelocity Gulf Coast Hydrogen Hub are poised to gain valuable insights from the H2@Scale project at UT Austin, which will inform the development of a comprehensive hydrogen network across the region.

About Frontier Energy

Frontier Energy, a subsidiary of GTI Energy, is a nationwide professional services and engineering firm with expertise in alternative transportation, building decarbonization, advanced energy efficiency, and market introduction of transformative technologies. Since 1999, Frontier Energy has staffed and managed the Hydrogen Fuel Cell Partnership, a public-private collaborative dedicated to hydrogen fuel cell transportation. Based in Pleasanton, California, Frontier Energy has offices in Texas, New York, Minnesota, and throughout California.

About GTI Energy

GTI Energy is a leading technology development organization. Our trusted team works to scale impactful solutions that shape energy transitions by leveraging gases, liquids, infrastructure, and efficiency. We embrace systems thinking, innovation, and collaboration to develop, scale, and deploy the technologies needed for low-carbon, low-cost energy systems.

About The University of Texas at Austin

UT Austin ranks among the 40 best universities in the world. It supports some 51,000 diverse students with top national programs across 18 colleges and schools. As Texas’ leading research university, UT attracts more than $650 million annually for discovery. The university contributes to the advancement of society through research, creative activity, scholarly inquiry, and the development and dissemination of new knowledge, including the commercialization of university discoveries. https://cem.utexas.edu/

About H2@Scale

H2@Scale is a U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) initiative led by the Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE) to enable affordable hydrogen production, storage, distribution, and utilization across multiple sectors of the economy. It includes DOE-funded projects and national laboratory-industry co-funded activities to accelerate research, development, and demonstration of hydrogen technologies and advance the H2@Scale vision.

 

 

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