Hydrogen Education Foundation
The Hydrogen Education Foundation is the charitable, education-focused arm of the National Hydrogen Association which administers four great programs:
+ H2 & You;
+ Hydrogen Student Design Contest;
+ H-Prize; and
+ the Proton Energy Scholarship!
 
Hydrogen Education Foundation

Hydrogen Education Foundation Wow, this is a great video about #hydrogen and #fuelcells from @cafcp.

Source: www.cafcp.org
Look for monthly additions of “Test Drive the Future with Matt Kelly” on CaFCP’s YouTube channel. This month, Dave Barthmuss from GM explains the Chevy Equinox FCV and takes host Matt Kelly for a test drive during the Santa Monica Alternative Vehicle Expo. ...
Hydrogen Education Foundation

Hydrogen Education Foundation Chevy Volt costs vs. Chevy Equinox costs is a case of apples and oranges. Learn why in this enlightening piece from an unexpected source.

Source: green.autoblog.com
The other day we reported on an interview with General Motors CEO Fritz Henderson published in the Washington Post. While most of the discussion focused on the bailout and bankruptcy, from the perspective ...
Debbie Fortin
Debbie Fortin
Anything that is in R & D and is hand made costs an arm and a leg. Once they're massed produced the cost goes down, becomes reasonable, and profitable. Can't wait until we're able to buy the FCEVs.
November 5 at 3:10am
Debbie Fortin
Debbie Fortin
Besides, the cost of the fuel cell itself, is dropping dramatically, as progress is being made and the engineers are learning more.
November 5 at 3:13am
Hydrogen Education Foundation
Richard J. Ross

Richard J. Ross Where's the "stimulus money" when you need it -- jobs, infrastructure, environmental improvement, energy independence -- all in one -- for a lot less than $1 Trillion, I'd expect...

November 3 at 9:13am · Report
Hydrogen Education Foundation
Hydrogen Education Foundation
The stimulus money did include $43 million for early market hydrogen applications like forklifts and stationary power (the forklift portion alone will nearly double the number of hydrogen forklifts in service!) However, this amount is paltry compared to the over $2.4 Billion (56X more) for batteries and electric vehicles--and strangely, fuel cell electric vehicle proposals were universally rejected for the electric vehicle funding. Doesn't quite make sense does it?
November 4 at 6:54am
Richard J. Ross
Richard J. Ross
None whatsoever -- fuel cell technology essentially exists today -- all that's needed is development of infrastructure and delivery. Seems like we could make this happen fairly quickly giventhe political will...
November 4 at 8:10am
Helz Oneil Mcfugly

Helz Oneil Mcfugly I heard about a study at, I think MIT, where they were able to make hydrogen with 70% less energy by using Urea. any news on that?

November 2 at 12:15pm · Report
Hydrogen Education Foundation
Hydrogen Education Foundation
Thanks Helz! There are lots of promising technologies for producing hydrogen in various laboratories. We can't validate the 70% claim, but urea along with many other waste streams are certainly worth looking into further and then demonstrating them to determine their commercial viability. Here's a little more info: http://bit.ly/1VZern
November 3 at 9:11am
Hydrogen Education Foundation
November 5 at 10:16am
Hydrogen Education Foundation

Hydrogen Education Foundation Photos from the opening of New York's newest hydrogen station.

You can find more info here: http://www.airproducts.com/PressRoom/CompanyNews/Archived/2009/21Oct2009.htm

Lindsay Leveen
Lindsay Leveen
carry on fueling some of the people some of the time but you can'y fuel all the people all of the time. go to www.greenexplored.com for a fill up on reality
November 3 at 6:38am
John Haynes
John Haynes
Amitabh, it's easy to spread aspersions. How about backing up your swear with a debatable reason?
November 3 at 9:39am
Hydrogen Education Foundation

Hydrogen Education Foundation New London H2 station to be complete by summer to fuel 5 new zero emission buses for the city and coming Olympic Games. http://www.tfl.gov.uk/corporate/media/newscentre/13398.aspx

Source: www.tfl.gov.uk
Hydrogen has massive potential to cut carbon emissions and improve air quality in the Capital to enhance Londoners' quality of life
Kyle Cory
Kyle Cory
Thank God
November 3 at 11:37am
Harry

Harry http://www.fuelcrazyamerica.com
check this out!

Source: www.fuelcrazyamerica.com
fuelcrazyamerica.com
Daniel Duggan

Daniel Duggan BTW. just thinking of the future of Hydrogen makes me so giddy. I'm a freshman in an environmental science major and I'm so excited for the future of alternative energy! It's all I ever talk about; I can't help it.

October 30 at 2:04pm · Report
Hydrogen Education Foundation
Hydrogen Education Foundation
Daniel, we love seeing posts like this--we're giddly too! I hope you're sharing what you're learning here with your friends and be on the lookout for the announcement of the new 2009-2010 Hydrogen Student Design Contest. http://www.hydrogencontest.org/ We'd love to see you put a team together to compete!
November 4 at 6:52am
Daniel Duggan
Daniel Duggan
Thanks so much. I'll totally look into it!
November 4 at 7:07am
Hydrogen Education Foundation

Hydrogen Education Foundation
In this photo, can you identify where the hydrogen is being used and and where solid rocket fuel is? Solid rocket fuel makes a bright, cloudy plume. Hydrogen, which puts out a similar amount of energy and heat, doesn't look like it--the flame is a barely visible pale blue with no visible smoke. It's carbon in any fuel... that makes a flame bright. Since hydrogen has no carbon, you don't the brightness, fumes, or anything that smells at all--much cleaner.Read More

Daniel Duggan
Daniel Duggan
Beautiful!
October 30 at 2:01pm
Stacey Enderle
October 31 at 6:44am
Hydrogen Education Foundation

Hydrogen Education Foundation The Ares rocket, scheduled replace the space shuttle, used hydrogen as a propellant during its successful test launch yesterday

Source: www.nasa.gov
NASA.gov brings you images, videos and interactive features from the unique perspective of America’s space agency. Get the latest updates on NASA missions, subscribe to blogs, RSS feeds and podcasts, ...
Stacey Enderle
Stacey Enderle
So what type of vessel is going to take place of the space shuttle? Where do I find out more to satisfy my curiousity.
October 31 at 6:57am
Hydrogen Education Foundation
Hydrogen Education Foundation
"NASA is developing the new Ares I and Ares V launch systems as replacements. The Ares I rocket is intended primarily to launch human astronauts, while the Ares V will launch automated cargo missions," according to the Daily Tech article below
November 2 at 10:39am
Hydrogen Education Foundation

Hydrogen Education Foundation The new provost at the University of South Carolina talks economic challenges and the leading role the university plays in hydrogen research. "I believe the solution to our energy problems is going to be as complex as the problem..."

Source: www.free-times.com
Free Times - Columbia's Free Alternative Weekly
Hydrogen Education Foundation

Hydrogen Education Foundation The new sign-up form for the Mercedes Benz B-Class hydrogen fuel cell vehicle is here!
http://tiny.cc/V9UdB

Slava
Slava
only for USA, no place for France(
October 29 at 12:35am
Lindsay Leveen
Lindsay Leveen
fore once I rather live in Iceland than California. Iceland wasted its money on banks and we will waste our money on this nonsense
October 29 at 5:07am
Hydrogen Education Foundation

Hydrogen Education Foundation Did you know that NASA is the largest single hydrogen customer? That probably won't end soon since as they retire the space shuttles, they're still using liquid hydrogen for the upper stage of the new Ares rockets. I had no idea the space shuttle was so small compared to the rockets....crazy!

Source: www.dailytech.com
No flight today for the Space Shuttle's replacement, maybe tomorrow says NASA
Jeff Thorn
Jeff Thorn
And the new ones are getting taller ~ 300+ feet???
October 28 at 1:47pm
Tom Fields

Tom Fields Here's an article that may be of interest, "INL scientist is harnessing the power of plasma." INL scientist Peter Kong is putting plasma to work, using it to produce nanoparticles, synthesize materials to store hydrogen and convert heavy hydrocarbons to transportation fuels. http://www.facebook.com/idahonationallaboratory