Last year, an Australian R&D team proposed a revolutionary new way to create and transport renewable hydrogen energy.

The partnership from Curtin University and Velox Energy Materials devised a circular hydrogen industry consisting of hydrogen generation, the capacity to turn it into a powdered storage form, and the infrastructure to refill the expended powder with new hydrogen.

Now funded by the Australian government, reports suggest this innovation will catapult Australia to the position of world leader in renewable hydrogen exportation, and make hydrogen energy use substantially more viable for countries around the world to use for achieving decarbonization targets.

A mere month of expected output at 2030 production targets would more than satisfy the entire global hydrogen energy d

See Full Page