Could green hydrogen replace fossil fuels for home electricity?
Electrolyzing the equivalent amount of water from one toilet flush could power a typical house for a week. Green hydrogen has certainly been in the spotlight on an increasing basis and has been making particularly big hydrogen news headlines since COP26 in November. Now, companies are looking into ways to bring clean H2 into home heating and electricity. In fact, a German start-up has already announced that it has the technology required to make it possible to use green hydrogen to power homes emission-free all over the world. The three-year-old company is called Enapter and its focus is on r…
Electrolyzing the equivalent amount of water from one toilet flush could power a typical house for a week.
Green hydrogen has certainly been in the spotlight on an increasing basis and has been making particularly big hydrogen news headlines since COP26 in November.Now, companies are looking into ways to bring clean H2 into home heating and electricity.
In fact, a German start-up has already announced that it has the technology required to make it possible to use green hydrogen to power homes emission-free all over the world. The three-year-old company is called Enapter and its focus is on replacing home power solutions with clean H2, particularly in cases reliant on polluting fossil fuels such as diesel generators. “I wanted to replace all the diesel generators in New Caledonia and all the remote areas that didn't need to rely on dirty diesel,” said Enapter co-founder Vaitea Cowan. “But then realising the potential for green hydrogen to replace fossil fuels, I wanted to be part of this change.” At the same time, Cowan didn’t fail to recognize that this change will be possible only if it is economically feasible. It’s all well and good for an alternative energy technology to be effective, but if it is not affordable, it will simply never reach mainstream use. “Green solutions will only be adopted if they are the most economically attractive. And that's our mission at an after to make green hydrogen cost-competitive with fossil fuels,” she said.