ABB will provide the electrical systems
for two U.S. hydrogen plants being built by fuel-cell provider Plug
Power.
Why it matters: Plug
Power is the largest buyer of liquid hydrogen in the world.
The big picture: The
first of the company's two new plants, "Project Gateway," will be
North America's largest production facility for so-called
green hydrogen. Located in Gennessee County in Upstate New York,
it is set to produce 45 metric tons of liquid hydrogen daily.
- The second plant, located in Camden
County in southeastern Georgia, will produce 15 tons of liquid
green hydrogen per day.
- The plants, already under
construction, are expected to begin producing hydrogen as soon as
2023.
Context: Companies are
racing to deploy clean-burning hydrogen as a fuel in vehicles —
especially those where batteries face greater technical and economic
challenges, such as heavy trucks — and as a power source.
- Hydrogen is currently used in
industrial processes like producing fertilizer and refining
petrDoleum.
Details: Plug Power
says that the hydrogen will be used for the transportation and
logistics sectors.
- The contract with ABB is valued at
roughly $200-300 million, Plug Power vice president Kevin
Kopczynski told Axios.
- Customers have signed on to buy
power from the plants, but when asked, Kopczynski cited the
company's current big-name clients: "The ones that we talk about
are Amazon, Wal Mart, Home Depot, General Motors."
Catch up fast: Green
hydrogen uses renewable energy to power the electrolysis process
that separates hydrogen and oxygen atoms. The electrolysis process
at Plug Power's New York plant, for example, will run on hydropower.
- Other colors such as blue and gray
along the "hydrogen rainbow" are less climate-friendly, relying on
natural gas for example.
- The 60 tons of green hydrogen
produced daily by the two Plug Power plants will replace 170 tons
of fossil fuels, ABB says.
Reality check:
Producing hydrogen with renewable energy remains relatively costly —
last year, about
twice as much as other methods.
- "If we can bring down the cost of
the molecule, alleviate some of the concern about, 'Is this green
or not,' this is going to grow the market for us," Kopczynski
says, though he declined to state how much hydrogen from the new
plants will cost once they're completed.
- "We're not saying those numbers
exactly. But it is substantially less than what we have to source
hydrogen from today. People talk about natural gas parity, we are
marching toward diesel fuel parity. That is something we feel
quite strongly is going to happen in a five-year time-frame."
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