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Spain's Exolum tests utilizing oil infrastructure for green hydrogen in Britain

Spanish oil storage infrastructure company Exolum has actually begun a pilot project in Britain this week to test using existing oil infrastructure to transportation and shop green hydrogen on an industrial scale.

The test uses liquid organic hydrogen providers (LOHC) - natural substances that can soak up and release hydrogen through chemical reactions - to carry and save hydrogen in liquid kind, the company stated on Wednesday, in what it states is a world initially.

The aim is to take on a crucial issue of the hydrogen economy: how to securely transport it to end users at sensible expense.

Recycling existing fossil fuel storage and pipelines would assistance accelerate the implementation of green hydrogen, the company stated. So-called green hydrogen is produced using renewable energy.

Exolum, partially owned by buyout fund CVC, Australian asset supervisor Macquarie, Canadian pension fund OMERS, and French bank Credit Agricole, will utilize its infrastructure at the British freight port of Immingham.

Under the job, which the British government supported with 505,000 pounds ($ 647,000), some 400 cubic metres of LOHC consisting of 20 metric lots of hydrogen will be carried through a 1.5 kilometre (0.9 mile) pipeline.

Early next year, the business plans to release a report with prospective expenses and benefits of the system.

(source: Reuters)