Hydrogen Fuel News
Insights / Organizations / Department of Energy

Department of Energy

govUnited States 219 mentions

Energy policy and research

Read the full profile on Department of Energy

Subscribers get an in-depth intelligence profile — leadership, scale, partners, regulatory context, and the latest milestones.

Subscribe to read more →

Projects

Facilities

Products

Research studies

Often mentioned with · Technologies

Often mentioned with · Locations

Often mentioned with · Projects

Often mentioned with · Facilities

Often mentioned with · Products

Often mentioned with · People

Often mentioned with · Research studies

In the news (219)

The Philippine DOE is the primary government agency responsible for the nation's energy sector. In 2023, it developed the 'Hydrogen and Fusion Energy Roadmap' to contribute to carbon neutrality and energy transition. In January 2024, the DOE issued Department Order No. DO2024-04-0004, defining green hydrogen and provid
The DOE's Hydrogen and Fuel Cell Technologies Office is developing technologies targeting hydrogen production costs of $2/kg by 2026 and $1/kg by 2031 via net-zero emissions pathways.
In early 2025, the DOE provided Plug Power with a $1.66 billion loan guarantee, reflecting the agency’s confidence in and the government’s push for hydrogen as part of the clean energy transition.[3]
The DOE administers the Hydrogen Shot initiative targeting $1/kg hydrogen cost, provided $58M in AEM R&D funding in 2023, and is backing the US Clean Hydrogen Strategy with $9.5B for clean hydrogen hubs.
U.S. federal agency providing funding for hydrogen hubs; California lawmakers are lobbying to preserve DOE funding for hydrogen infrastructure development.
The DOE's hydrogen funding is frozen, causing delays and uncertainty for traditional hydrogen projects.
The Department of Energy's hydrogen hub program is providing $1 billion in allocation to BP's Midwest Regional MachH2 hydrogen hub in northwest Indiana.
Working to complement the Section 45V tax credits with its Regional Clean Hydrogen Hubs program.
This department has a 'Hydrogen Shot' goal aimed at reducing hydrogen production costs, which is relevant to the economic viability of hydrogen heating.
Cited for information on hydrogen storage.
The Department of Energy provided Cummins with a $75 million grant to support the transformation of the Columbus Engine Plant.
US federal agency focused on production and use of clean hydrogen throughout the country. The DoE has identified and assessed massive golden hydrogen deposits in the US and claims they could be worth trillions of dollars.
The Department of Energy published a roadmap for H2 infrastructure, highlighting the need for a rapid scale-up in pipelines.
U.S. federal agency overseeing the $8 billion hydrogen hub funding program and responsible for emissions reporting.
Initiated the Appalachian Regional Clean Hydrogen Hub (ARCH2) project.
The DOE emphasizes the role of hydrogen as a key pillar in the nation's decarbonization efforts and is fostering $7 billion hydrogen hub projects, aligning with a strategy that appears to favor green hydrogen.
The Department of Energy selected the Regional Clean Hydrogen Hubs and is providing substantial investment into these projects. The H2Hub Summit will feature speakers from these DoE-selected projects.
The Department of Energy's website is cited as a source for information regarding the need to reduce the cost of hydrogen fuel cells without compromising performance.
U.S. federal agency that selected seven hydrogen hubs; Duke Energy was not chosen but is proceeding independently.
The Department of Energy is a potential source of funding for Plug Power through a $1.5 billion loan as part of its green H2 network financing strategy.
U.S. government agency that has set a goal to produce green hydrogen at $1 per kilogram by 2030, which the MIT research aims to support.
The DOE is overseeing the allocation of funds for clean hydrogen hubs and other clean energy initiatives, including the Hydrogen Shot and Clean Hydrogen Electrolysis Program.
U.S. federal agency that administered the H2Hubs grant program, receiving approximately 80 concept papers and selecting 7 projects for funding.
The DoE is distributing approximately $8 billion in funding from the Inflation Reduction Act to support hydrogen hub development across the United States. It has announced plans to fund between 6 and 10 hydrogen hubs and received 79 proposals for consideration.
According to the Department of Energy, there are currently 55 H2 stations in the United States, all of which are in California.

Get the H2 Markets Brief

what 120,000+ hydrogen industry pros read every Monday.

Get the H2 Markets Brief

what 120,000+ hydrogen industry pros read every Monday.