Gonna need to also invest in the production of ammonia from atmospheric nitrogen. The industry-dominant Haber-Bosch process uses natural gas, i.e. fossil-derived methane, as its input, and produces CO2 as an output.
It is not ammonia powered. It is hydrogen powered. The hydrogen is pulled from the ammonia and used in the fuel cell. Doesn't the hydrogen in the ammonia originally come from coal or gas?
So, is this more of a test for using ammonia as an intermediary storage for hydrogen fuel? Not the headline but that seems way more of a revolutionary concept. That could make the hydrogen economy competitive with gasoline?
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Gonna need to also invest in the production of ammonia from atmospheric nitrogen. The industry-dominant Haber-Bosch process uses natural gas, i.e. fossil-derived methane, as its input, and produces CO2 as an output.
So, is this more of a test for using ammonia as an intermediary storage for hydrogen fuel? Not the headline but that seems way more of a revolutionary concept. That could make the hydrogen economy competitive with gasoline?