Along with New York and Vermont, the states working together on a proposal for the Northeast Clean Hydrogen Hub are Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Jersey and Rhode Island.
With 47 further companies and organisations joining since August 2022, the initiative now also counts more than 100 clean hydrogen ecosystem partners, from electrolyser manufacturers and end users such as the aviation industry to ports and utilities.
The seven states, together with their partners from across the industry and academia, plan to develop and submit a full proposal to the US Department of Energy (DOE) to compete for funding through the USD 8 billion programme for the creation of regional clean hydrogen hubs (H2Hubs), funded through the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law.
The US government announced the clean hydrogen programme at the beginning of 2022 and New York, Connecticut, Massachusetts, and New Jersey signed an agreement to jointly develop a proposal for a Regional Clean Energy Hydrogen Hub shortly after that.
In September 2022, the Department of Energy issued an initial Clean Hydrogen Hubs Funding Opportunity Announcement with concept papers due on 7 November last year. Under the call, proposals may be awarded up to a maximum of USD 1.25 billion.
The Northeast Regional Clean Hydrogen Hub received notification from the DOE to move forward with full proposal development on 27 December 2022, with submissions due by 7 April 2023, according to the New York State’s government.
The seven-state coalition, led by New York, says its focus is on coordinating the regional fuel cell innovation ecosystem, integrating offshore wind and solar photovoltaic materials into hydrogen production and deploying hydrogen for use in transportation, heavy industry, power generation, and maritime applications, or other appropriate uses consistent with decarbonisation efforts.
“With planned development, offshore wind can be a major contributor to the partnership and ultimately hydrogen production and storage”, Executive Director of the National Offshore Wind R&D Consortium, Carrie Cullen Hitt, said last year.