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Could green hydrogen be key to a carbon-free economy?

GreenBiz

The last 15 percent of the economy is hard to clean up — aviation, shipping, manufacturing, long-distance trucking," Fakhry said in an interview. Hydrogen derived from methane — usually from natural gas, but also coal and biomass — was pioneered in World War II by Germany, which has no petroleum deposits. Green hydrogen can do that.".

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Could trash-to-energy technology feed hydrogen demand?

GreenBiz

A few tech companies are working to grow clean hydrogen in Europe and Asia and, lately, California. Meanwhile, there are applications with few low-carbon options that need the biomass more, such as biofuels for aviation," said Meera Atreya, Energy Transitions Commission Bioeconomy lead. There are other ways to make hydrogen.

Hydrogen 532
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Big Meat Unveils Battle Plans for COP28

DeSmogBlog

percent contribution to global human-induced emissions is a higher share than aviation. Animal agriculture is the largest emitter of methane, a greenhouse gas 80 times more potent than carbon dioxide when measured over a 20 year period. rise in temperature that risks tipping the world into irreversible climate breakdown.

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Five surprise technologies that can turbocharge the net zero transition

Business Green

Rearing livestock is a major contributor to global greenhouse gas emissions, in part because it contributes to deforestation as land is cleared either to rear animals or to grow crops to provide animal feed and in part through methane emissions from cattle. And that's where the seaweed comes in. That's because its potential is huge.

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Could green hydrogen be key to a carbon-free economy?

AGreenLiving

“The last 15 percent of the economy is hard to clean up — aviation, shipping, manufacturing, long-distance trucking,” Fakhry said in an interview. Hydrogen derived from methane — usually from natural gas, but also coal and biomass — was pioneered in World War II by Germany, which has no petroleum deposits.

article thumbnail

Could trash-to-energy technology feed hydrogen demand?

Business Green

A few tech companies are working to grow clean hydrogen in Europe and Asia and, lately, California. Meanwhile, there are applications with few low-carbon options that need the biomass more, such as biofuels for aviation," said Meera Atreya, Energy Transitions Commission Bioeconomy lead. There are other ways to make hydrogen.

article thumbnail

Could trash-to-energy technology feed hydrogen demand?

AGreenLiving

A few tech companies are working to grow clean hydrogen in Europe and Asia and, lately, California. Meanwhile, there are applications with few low-carbon options that need the biomass more, such as biofuels for aviation,” said Meera Atreya, Energy Transitions Commission Bioeconomy lead.

Demand 28