DOE Awards $7B to 7 Regional Hydrogen Hubs to Decarbonize Energy Sector

Oct. 13, 2023
The seven hydrogen hubs, each receiving close to $1 billion in funding commitments, include the Mid-Atlantic, Appalachian, California, Gulf Coast, Heartland, Midwest, and Pacific Northwest initiatives

The U.S. Department of Energy has selected seven hydrogen hub sites to receive more than $7 billion in funding from the two-year-old Infrastructure Act.

The financial aim is part of the Biden Administration’s multi-pronged approach to incentivizing decarbonization in the energy sector. Hydrogen is an energy-dense resource that does not generate carbon emissions when combusted, but it is considered truly green H2 only when created from electrolyzers powered by carbon-free energy such as solar, wind, hydro, or nuclear.

The announcement by President Biden and Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm highlights the regional hub equation to solving hydrogen’s infrastructural challenges. Currently there is no nationwide network of pipelines to move H2, which is a lighter gas than the methane natural gas currently dominating the power generation industry.

Minneapolis-based energy planning and research non-profit Great Plains Institute’s CEO, Rolf Nordstrom, expressed optimism that the DOE and Infrastructure Act award will drive future scaling up of hydrogen in the baseload and transportation energy mix. Great Plains Institute also is engaged in several hydrogen infrastructure project efforts.

“Today’s announcement of federally support hydrogen hubs launches a new opportunity to equitably build a clean hydrogen economy,” Nordstrom said in a statement. “GPI looks forward to working with the new hubs to accelerate decarbonization across the economy [sectors such as] agriculture, heavy industry and parts of the transportation sector.”

The seven hydrogen hubs, each receiving close to $1 billion in funding commitments, include the Mid-Atlantic, Appalachian, California, Gulf Coast, Heartland, Midwest, and Pacific Northwest initiatives. Altogether, the DOE says these hubs will create more than 320,000 direct jobs, including initial construction and more permanent operational positions.

Proponents believe that expanding the role of carbon-free hydrogen into the energy economy will help the U.S. reach decarbonization objectives in the near term and net zero by 2050. Hydrogen currently is under study as a mixed fuel with methane gas in several gas turbine projects.

The regional hydrogen hub concept was first detailed more than two years ago by the DOE and a cross-section of energy industry companies. Public and private partnership group Connected DMV and other industrial firms submitted an application to the DOE this May to create the Mid-Atlantic Hydrogen Hub to serve markets across Washington, D.C., Virginia, and Maryland.

The application predicts this project alone could create more than 8,000 permanent jobs by 2030 and displace more than 420,000 metric tons of carbon dioxide (CO2) per year. The hub would include electrolyzer capacity, liquid H2 modules, depots, refueling stations, combustion turbines, fuel-cell vehicles, and market interaction.

All of the hubs, if and when completed, will comprise many of the same assets and functions. Much of the hydrogen will be split from water via electrolyzers, while some will be generated by steam reforming of methane gas and also include some carbon capture technologies and storage, according to reports.

Energy sector companies already engaged in the hubs initiative or other hydrogen production work include Mitsubishi Power, Black & Veatch, TRC, AES, Chevron­­, ExxonMobil, Orsted, BNSF Railway, Cummins, Bakken Energy, Southern California Gas Co., Wärtsilä, Air Liquide, Honeywell, Marathon Petroleum, and EQT, among many others.

The federal Infrastructure Act created close to $65 billion in funding for low and zero-carbon energy technologies, including renewables.

About the Author

Rod Walton, EnergyTech Managing Editor | Senior Editor

For EnergyTech editorial inquiries, please contact Managing Editor Rod Walton at [email protected].

Rod Walton has spent 15 years covering the energy industry as a newspaper and trade journalist. He formerly was energy writer and business editor at the Tulsa World. Later, he spent six years covering the electricity power sector for Pennwell and Clarion Events. He joined Endeavor and EnergyTech in November 2021.

Walton earned his Bachelors degree in journalism from the University of Oklahoma. His career stops include the Moore American, Bartlesville Examiner-Enterprise, Wagoner Tribune and Tulsa World. 

EnergyTech is focused on the mission critical and large-scale energy users and their sustainability and resiliency goals. These include the commercial and industrial sectors, as well as the military, universities, data centers and microgrids. The C&I sectors together account for close to 30 percent of greenhouse gas emissions in the U.S.

He was named Managing Editor for Microgrid Knowledge and EnergyTech starting July 1, 2023

Many large-scale energy users such as Fortune 500 companies, and mission-critical users such as military bases, universities, healthcare facilities, public safety and data centers, shifting their energy priorities to reach net-zero carbon goals within the coming decades. These include plans for renewable energy power purchase agreements, but also on-site resiliency projects such as microgrids, combined heat and power, rooftop solar, energy storage, digitalization and building efficiency upgrades.