• Germany just made a major move in clean energy.
    At BASF’s Ludwigshafen site, the most powerful PEM electrolyzer in Europe is now live—built with Siemens Energy to produce up to 8,000 tons of green hydrogen annually.

    This 54MW system, powered by 72 electrolysis stacks, will replace fossil-based inputs for ammonia and methanol—cutting emissions by up to 72,000 tons every year. It’s a bold leap toward carbon-free industry and a cleaner European future.

    Hydrogen just became a real industrial power player.
    How Germany is scaling green fuel —

    #GreenHydrogen #Electrolyzer #GermanyEnergy #CleanEnergyFuture #SiemensEnergy #SustainableIndustry #MechanicTimes
    Germany just made a major move in clean energy. At BASF’s Ludwigshafen site, the most powerful PEM electrolyzer in Europe is now live—built with Siemens Energy to produce up to 8,000 tons of green hydrogen annually. This 54MW system, powered by 72 electrolysis stacks, will replace fossil-based inputs for ammonia and methanol—cutting emissions by up to 72,000 tons every year. It’s a bold leap toward carbon-free industry and a cleaner European future. Hydrogen just became a real industrial power player. How Germany is scaling green fuel — #GreenHydrogen #Electrolyzer #GermanyEnergy #CleanEnergyFuture #SiemensEnergy #SustainableIndustry #MechanicTimes
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  • Japan is racing to turn outer space into Earth’s next power plant.
    Through the OHISAMA project, engineers are preparing to launch a satellite in 2025 that will harvest solar energy in orbit and beam it wirelessly to Earth using microwaves.

    With 24/7 access to sunlight and no weather disruptions, space-based solar panels could outshine ground farms—and may signal the beginning of a new age in clean energy.

    The sun never sets in orbit — and neither will this power source.

    #SpaceSolarPower #JapanInnovation #CleanEnergyFuture #OHISAMA #OrbitalEnergy #RenewableRevolution
    Japan is racing to turn outer space into Earth’s next power plant. Through the OHISAMA project, engineers are preparing to launch a satellite in 2025 that will harvest solar energy in orbit and beam it wirelessly to Earth using microwaves. With 24/7 access to sunlight and no weather disruptions, space-based solar panels could outshine ground farms—and may signal the beginning of a new age in clean energy. The sun never sets in orbit — and neither will this power source. #SpaceSolarPower #JapanInnovation #CleanEnergyFuture #OHISAMA #OrbitalEnergy #RenewableRevolution
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