Hydrogen Storage Takes the Wheel: Verne Inc. Builds Cryo-Compressed Tank Facility in Pennsylvania
July 11, 2025Verne Inc., a trailblazer in hydrogen storage tech based out of San Francisco, is gearing up to open a brand-new manufacturing facility in Lycoming County, Pennsylvania. Right in the heart of the Marcellus Energy Park. This new site will crank out mobile cryo-compressed hydrogen (CcH2) tanks—perfect for powering industries like data centers and shipping ports that are grappling with surging energy needs but still want to go clean and off-grid.
Big Backers, Big Plans
This isn’t just a shot in the dark—Verne’s bringing serious backing to the table. Support is coming in from the Amazon Climate Pledge Fund, NextEra Energy Resources, and the U.S. Department of Energy’s ARPA-E program. On top of that, the state’s kicking in nearly $1.3 million in incentives to help bring this vision to life. Once the facility’s up and running, it’s expected to generate at least 61 high-skill jobs for the local workforce.
Scaling Up with Next-Gen Technology
By 2027, Verne’s aiming to ramp up to 4,000 tanks per year. The secret sauce? A unique approach to cryo-compressed hydrogen that stores fuel in a super-dense state by chilling and compressing it. It’s a smart way to sidestep overloaded electric grids—something that’s becoming more of a bottleneck every day as industries race toward zero-emission technologies.
Powering the Shift to a Cleaner Future
This plant isn’t just about making tanks—it’s a big step toward real, on-the-ground industrial decarbonization. With research support from Lawrence Livermore National Lab, Verne’s breakthrough tech is helping Pennsylvania pivot from its fossil fuel past toward a future powered by sustainable energy. The new facility is more than a factory—it’s a signal that America’s hydrogen economy is shifting from concept to reality.



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