There’s enough natural hydrogen trapped underground to meet all projected demands for hundreds of years. An unpublished report by the US Geological Survey identifies it as a new primary resource, and fires the starter pistol on a new gold rush.

  • @bfg9k
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    27 months ago

    Great, have we solved the infrastructure and storage problem yet?

    Until we can transport and store it easily, all the production in the world won’t help.

    • HypxOP
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      fedilink
      27 months ago

      Yes. It is just a matter of building that infrastructure. And we can reuse the natural gas infrastructure for most of it. People are basically stuck in the past on this subject.

    • @qx128
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      17 months ago

      This guy gets it. Doesn’t make sense when you have to move the stuff around a lot.

      Would be great for hubs, like ship yards. But it’s way too easy for fossil fuel companies to keep producing it with dirty methods that release methane.

  • @qx128
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    -27 months ago

    More greenwashing by natural gas companies. Utter nonsense. Check the facts.

    As of 2020, most hydrogen is produced from fossil fuels, resulting in carbon dioxide emissions.[92] Hydrogen produced by this technology has been described as grey hydrogen when emissions are released to the atmosphere, and blue hydrogen when emissions are captured through carbon capture and storage (CCS).[93][94] Blue hydrogen has been estimated to have a carbon footprint 20% greater than burning gas or coal for heat and 60% greater when compared to burning diesel for heat, assuming US up- and mid-stream methane leakage rates and production via steam methane reformers (SMR) retrofitted with carbon dioxide capture.[95]

    • @shalafi
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      English
      27 months ago

      We’re talking about H2 here, not CH4. And we’re talking mining, not producing.

      I can produce H2 from H20 in my kitchen. Done it lots of times! Of course that nets less energy than it took to extract.

      • @[email protected]
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        fedilink
        17 months ago

        Mining is hardly free from an environmental standpoint. Of course nothing is, but reading the speculation about this it seems very unlikely that mining will even get started anytime soon. It’s very exploratory both in the where and the how. If you’re talking about the next few decades you are talking about traditional fossil fuel.