Subscribe  Log in | Register | Advertise | Digital Issue   |   Search
  • Green hydrogen
  • Blue hydrogen
  • Storage & Transportation
  • Consumption
  • Strategies & Trends
  • Finance
  • Interactive Hydrogen Dashboard
Search
Related Articles
Equinor awards H2H Saltend Feed to Linde
The Norwegian energy firm has also tapped BOC for operation and maintenance
Hystar secures $26mn in series B
Norwegian PEM electrolyser manufacturer plans to have gigawatt-scale production capacity in place by 2025
HH2E taps Nel for Lubmin electrolysers
The Norwegian manufacturer has signed a letter of intent to provide a potential 120MW of capacity to the German developer
Yara to scale up German ammonia imports
Norwegian fertiliser company will modify existing terminals to increase ammonia import capacity to 3mn t/yr
Greenland offers green ammonia opportunity
H2Carrier and Anori aim to develop a 1.5GW wind project to supply floating production and storage of green hydrogen and ammonia
Blastr plans €4bn Finnish green steel plant
Norwegian startup aims to begin production by 2026
Nel increases US focus
Passing of Inflation Reduction Act has already led to two of the firm’s largest-ever orders
Yara joins Norwegian high-efficiency PEM pilot
Fertiliser group joins Equinor and Gassco in project to demonstrate electrolyser technology capable of ‘unrivalled’ efficiencies
Norway slow to embrace hydrogen export potential
The country's carbon storage potential makes it a good candidate for blue hydrogen exports
Nel takes FID on Heroya expansion
Facility’s capacity will double from 500MW/yr to 1GW/yr by April 2024 in €35mn expansion
Renewables to power green hydrogen production
Norway
Stuart Penson
20 May 2021
Follow @PetroleumEcon
Forward article link
Share PDF with colleagues

Hydro and Everfuel agree to develop electrolysers

Green hydrogen to supply Hydro’s aluminium plants and transport sector

Norwegian metals and energy company Hydro has signed a memorandum of understanding with Danish renewables firm Everfuel to develop electrolysers to supply green hydrogen to Hydro’s aluminium plants and to the transport sector. Initially, the companies have agreed to focus on three sites in Norway and in mainland Europe, to be announced in the second half of 2021. The electrolysers will be sited next to hydro-owned aluminium plants and will be fully owned by Hydro or majority-owned by Everfuel, depending on the supply destination of the hydrogen. "Hydrogen use will enable more sustainable operations in Hydro, and through the partnership with Everfuel we will also be able to sup

Welcome to the PE Media Network

PE Media Network publishes Petroleum Economist, Hydrogen Economist and Carbon Economist to form the only genuinely comprehensive intelligence service covering the global energy industry

 

Already registered?
Click here to log in
Subscribe now
to get full access
Register now
for a free trial
Any questions?
Contact us

Comments

Comments

{{ error }}
{{ comment.comment.Name }} • {{ comment.timeAgo }}
{{ comment.comment.Text }}
Also in this section
Neom project cost balloons to $8.5bn
3 February 2023
The three JV participants have also opted to shake up project financing, according to co-developer Air Products
Turkey outlines hydrogen plans
3 February 2023
The government prioritises replacing imported gas in the domestic energy system in a broad, heavily backloaded strategy
Equinor quits Barents Blue and Polaris
2 February 2023
Norwegian state-owned company walks away from ammonia and associated CCS projects after cooperation agreement expires
TotalEnergies and Air Liquide launch hydrogen refuelling JV
2 February 2023
Major joins growing list of companies exploring opportunities for hydrogen in road transport

Share PDF with colleagues

COPYRIGHT NOTICE: PDF sharing is permitted internally for Petroleum Economist Gold Members only. Usage of this PDF is restricted by <%= If(IsLoggedIn, User.CompanyName, "")%>’s agreement with Petroleum Economist – exceeding the terms of your licence by forwarding outside of the company or placing on any external network is considered a breach of copyright. Such instances are punishable by fines of up to US$1,500 per infringement
Send

Forward article Link

Send
Sign Up For Our Newsletter
Project Data
Maps
PE Store
Social Links
Social Feeds
  • Twitter
Tweets by Hydrogen Economist
Featured Video
Home
  • About us
  • Subscribe
  • Reaching your audience
  • PE Store
  • Terms and conditions
  • Contact us
  • Privacy statement
  • Cookies
  • Sitemap
All material subject to strictly enforced copyright laws © 2023 The Petroleum Economist Ltd
Cookie Settings
;

Search