News

MIT's sodium-air fuel cells may power electric planes, offering triple the energy of lithium-ion batteries and reducing carbon emissions.
A new type of fuel cell that runs on sodium metal could one day help clean up sectors where it’s difficult to replace fossil fuels, like rail, regional aviation, and short-distance shipping.
This past month Maritime Reporter TV has taken a close look at two hydrogen fuel cell projects: the new research vessel planned for Scripps Institution of Oceanography and e1 Marine’s methanol ...
German shipyard Meyer Werft has launched the zero4cruise project with project partners including Freudenberg e-Power Systems and the German Aerospace Center (DLR). The project aims to develop ...
The shipping industry is facing a fundamental change: growing environmental awareness and increasing regulatory emission requirements call for innovative solutions to make passenger ships more climate ...
The company has achieved 60 percent electrical efficiency using 100 percent hydrogen in their solid oxide fuel cells (SOFC). These cells are also capable of running on natural gas and hydrogen blends.
Fuel cells are configured in stacks of individual cells connected in a series. FuelCell Energy’s carbonate stacks have up to 400 cells per stack and produce between 250 kW and 400 kW of power.
Toyota's been developing fuel cells for nearly 30 years, and the company says there's still a lot of potential moving forward. With that, they just dedicated the "H2HQ" as they call it.
However, while fuel cells may not be the best suited for cars, as Toyota’s Mirai vehicle line has proven, they may be a much better match for larger vehicles such as pickups and trucks.
The two companies are now producing fuel cells out of its jointly owned facility in Michigan. The two companies are now producing fuel cells out of its jointly owned facility in Michigan. Andrew J ...
The 70,000-square-foot manufacturing plant jointly owned by GM and Honda has been producing salable fuel-cell modules for about a month, with a plan to build and deliver several thousand by year ...