Work Area
Hydrogen
Viewing page 20 of 25
-
Why Europe needs to focus on industrial decarbonisation
Industrial decarbonisation presents one of the hardest climate challenges in Europe, and the longer we ignore it, the harder it will become.
-
UAE’s decarbonization ambitions could be big news for global climate action
UAE’s decarbonization ambitions are big news for global climate action. Hydrogen can help them get closer to achieving those ambitions.
-
Major companies commit to zero-carbon fueled vessels by 2040, sending clear market signal to fuel producers
BOSTON — Nine major companies including Amazon, IKEA, Michelin, and Unilever announced today their commitment to progressively switch all of their ocean freight to vessels powered by zero-carbon fuels by 2040, in a “fantastic display of ambition that sends a clear market signal to the maritime value chain and fuel…
-
WATCH: Pathways to decarbonize marine shipping
Video explainer on the various pathways to decarbonize the global marine shipping sector by switching to zero-carbon fuels like hydrogen and ammonia.
-
IJmuiden and why a portfolio of solutions are still needed for the European steel industry
Tata Steel has opted to replace an existing blast furnaces with an alternative low-carbon technology based on clean hydrogen.
-
We need “blue” hydrogen. And we need to get it right.
“Blue” hydrogen can reduce emissions quickly in the near-term – if policy-makers reward appropriate performance.
-
New report finds nuclear-derived zero-carbon fuels could play a key role decarbonizing the global marine shipping sector
BOSTON — A new report from Clean Air Task Force (CATF) finds that nuclear-derived zero-carbon fuels could play a key role in decarbonizing the global marine shipping sector, and offers clear policy recommendations for how the U.S. could lead the global transition away from high-polluting shipping fuels. “The global marine shipping emissions are dangerously high and getting higher, and we absolutely must decarbonize the sector…
-
Bridging the Gap: How Nuclear-Derived Zero-Carbon Fuels Can Help Decarbonize Marine Shipping
A report from Clean Air Task Force (CATF) finds that nuclear-derived zero-carbon fuels like hydrogen and ammonia could play a key role in decarbonizing the global marine shipping sector, and offers clear policy recommendations for how the U.S. could lead the global transition away from high-polluting shipping fuels.