LAVO hydrogen fuel cell finds a home at 10 Australian solar farms
The H2 powered equipment comes with a high price tag but will be used for rooftop energy. The LAVO hydrogen fuel cell first made hydrogen news for the considerable AUD$35,000 (USD$26,280) price tag for its sub 5MW use unit, but it is now making fresh headlines for having found a notable buyer. The goal is to one day sell the H2 powered units as community batteries or for specific complexes. The LAVO hydrogen fuel cell “acts as a solar sponge, integrating with rooftop solar to capture and store renewable energy for use when you need it. It creates hydrogen from water, then stores the hydrogen…
The H2 powered equipment comes with a high price tag but will be used for rooftop energy.
The LAVO hydrogen fuel cell first made hydrogen news for the considerable AUD$35,000 (USD$26,280) price tag for its sub 5MW use unit, but it is now making fresh headlines for having found a notable buyer.The goal is to one day sell the H2 powered units as community batteries or for specific complexes.
The LAVO hydrogen fuel cell “acts as a solar sponge, integrating with rooftop solar to capture and store renewable energy for use when you need it. It creates hydrogen from water, then stores the hydrogen into LAVO’s patented metal hydride. It generates electricity by converting hydrogen into power and delivers power at a regulated voltage to your home,” said a statement from LAVO. Ten community based solar farms in regional Victoria, Australia will be benefitting from the addition of this H2 equipment through a partnership between the Providence Asset Group (PAG) and the Commonwealth Bank. The solar farms in this project are already operational. These farms produce enough energy to power 20,000 homes in their regions. The LAVO equipment will provide those solar farms with additional energy storage support.