Europe Called. Hydrolite Answered
From seawater electrolysis to stack scale-up challenges, a glimpse inside the EU projects shaping Hydrolite’s next phase of international collaboration. The work taking place at Hydrolite today is increasingly shaped beyond its own lab walls. Over the past years, the company has become an active participant in several European Union funded hydrogen initiatives, working alongside […]
The Hydrogen Hub Era Meets Reality
As projects move from headlines to construction sites, a clearer picture is emerging of what it takes to build a hydrogen economy, and how complex that process is. For a few years, hydrogen hubs became the clean energy world’s preferred shortcut to scale. Instead of scattered pilot projects, governments began designing regional ecosystems where production, […]
Powering Hydrogen Starts With People
As hydrogen projects scale worldwide, a critical bottleneck is emerging: the shortage of engineers, scientists, and operators needed to build and sustain the hydrogen economy. The hydrogen economy is often described in terms of gigawatts, electrolyzer efficiency, and cost curves. But beneath the technology and investment cycles lies a quieter constraint. As hydrogen projects move […]
Energy Security in an Age of Uncertainty
As gas routes tighten and geopolitics reshapes supply chains, hydrogen emerges as a potential strategic buffer for nations with limited domestic resources. Energy security has returned to the center of policy debates. Over the past few years, disruptions in natural gas flows, volatile oil markets, and shifting alliances have forced governments to reassess a long […]
2026 is the year AEM becomes ready to scale
Hydrolite’s CEO discusses product expansion, manufacturing maturity, and what a potential breakthrough year could mean for commercial deployment. As Hydrolite moves into 2026, the internal conversation has shifted. Less about promises, more about readiness. In this Q&A, CEO Ervin Tal Guttelmacher outlines how the company is preparing its AEM technology for scale, why membranes and […]
When Wastewater Becomes Fuel
Cities across the globe are exploring how sewage, sludge, and organic waste could become a source of hydrogen. For decades, urban wastewater was treated as an unavoidable by product of city life. It had to be cleaned, neutralized, and released with as little cost and attention as possible. Today, a growing number of municipalities are […]
When Hydrogen Tests the Waters of Shipping
From a Norwegian ferry to a Korean demonstrator, fuel cell propulsion is entering the maritime operations carefully but steadily. Shipping accounts for a significant share of global greenhouse gas emissions, largely because it relies on heavy fuel oil and long lived engine technologies that are difficult to replace. Unlike road transport or aviation, ships are […]
Can Hydrogen Keep the Cloud Online?
Pilot projects across three continents are testing hydrogen as backup power for data centers where downtime is not an option. The cloud never sleeps. Every search query, AI model, financial transaction, and streaming session relies on an infrastructure that operates around the clock, consuming vast amounts of power and demanding absolute reliability. As data centers […]
Hydrogen production is scaling fast. Storage is not.
As electrolyzers advance and renewable power expands, storage technologies are struggling to keep pace, shaping the economics of hydrogen’s next phase. If hydrogen is often described as the fuel of the future, its storage remains stubbornly anchored in the present. Producing hydrogen is no longer the central challenge it once was. Electrolyzers are scaling, costs […]
The New Highways of Clean Energy
From rail corridors in Europe to high pressure pipelines in the US and China, a new era of hydrogen logistics is beginning to take shape. Hydrogen is often described as the fuel of the future, yet for many engineers and policymakers the real challenge sits between production and use. Unlike natural gas, hydrogen is lighter, […]