Hydrogen As A Viable Answer
The U.S Department of Energy (DOE) is working to build an energy system for the future which is cleaner, more efficient, and more reliable than current technology in order to ensure our nation?s energy security and environmental viability. The DOE sees hydrogen as a potential answer to satisfying many of our energy needs, in addition to reducing carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gas emissions. The following is a summary that demonstrates how hydrogen can affect everyday life, while providing benefits to the environment, technological advances, and economic growth.
The cost of energy (electricity) derived from hydrogen fuel cells vary depending on time, place, and economic conditions. Costs can be increased or decreased incrementally by transferring the created electricity to and from hydrogen fuel cells via the “grid”. The grid is the superhighway of interconnecting wires that feeds its consumer needs from large power plants. It is currently the most efficient way of getting energy from a source to a consumer. A hydrogen fuel cell can act in many different ways as a complement or substitute to the grid.
Most places that utilize fuel cells as of present day are hospitals, hotels, and
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