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Pittsburgh Region Gets State Push for Possible Hydrogen Hub - The Green Voice

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Pittsburgh Region Gets State Push for Possible Hydrogen Hub
by Michael Machosky
May 17, 2022
When you think of clean energy, you think of wind, solar, geothermal, hydrogen, right  — ?

Wait, what was that last one — ?    

Expect  to hear a lot about hydrogen soon. Recently, Governor Tom Wolf  announced that he’s leading a broad bipartisan coalition of energy,  industry (including heavyweights like Shell and U.S. Steel), organized  labor and nonprofits to push for industrial decarbonization. A potential  key to cleaning up Western PA’s vast industrial sector — a major source  of pollution and greenhouse gas emissions — could be the development of  clean hydrogen, as well as carbon capture, utilization and storage  technologies.

To do that, they’re planning to apply for one of  four Regional Clean Hydrogen Hubs funded by $8 billion in the 2021  Bipartisan Infrastructure Law. Two Hubs must be in regions with natural  gas resources (like Pennsylvania).

“As governor of Pennsylvania, I  have long prioritized energy policy that moves us towards a cleaner  energy future, while also creating good paying energy sector jobs,” says  Gov. Wolf. “As a national leader in energy and  manufacturing…Pennsylvania is primed for this opportunity to lead the  transition to a new energy ecosystem in which fuels like hydrogen play a  central role in both our economic success as well as achieving our  decarbonization goals.”

A Regional Clean Hydrogen Hub and its  associated infrastructure would theoretically use natural gas to create  hydrogen, which could be sent through pipelines as a fuel.
So many  of Pittsburgh’s legacy industries, like steel and energy, are hard to  decarbonize. The industrial sector accounts for up to a third of carbon  emissions nationwide.
                                           
                                        
“Clean  hydrogen is key to cleaning up American manufacturing and slashing  emissions from carbon-intensive materials like steel and cement while  creating good-paying jobs for American workers,” says U.S. Secretary of  Energy Jennifer M. Granholm. “We're seeking feedback from the American  public on how to make scaling up this clean, affordable energy source a  reality for the United States.”  

Hydrogen plays a big part in the  U.S. Department of Energy’s strategy for achieving President Biden’s  goal of a 100% clean electrical grid by 2035 and net-zero carbon  emissions by 2050.

The governor and 24 industry, labor and  environmental stakeholders signed onto  a declaration signaling their commitment to help create a regional  ecosystem to achieve decarbonization — which includes transitioning to  clean hydrogen — and make the Commonwealth competitive for attracting  investment and creating jobs.

However, there’s already opposition to the proposal among some environmental groups, like the Pittsburgh-based Breathe Project.

“We  know doubling down on fossil-fuel-based infrastructure only puts fossil  fuel special interests first,” says Matt Mehalik, executive director of  the Breathe Project. “We have been hearing excuses about gas as a  bridge fuel for over a decade. It's time that we are across that bridge  to renewable energy, not fossil fuel band-aids.”

The Department of Energy is seeking comments from stakeholders as it decides how the money will be distributed.
                                           
                                        
Michael Machosky
Michael Machosky is a regular contributor for The Green Voice.
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