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Hydrogen

The annual U.S. demand for hydrogen is over 12 million tons, and expected to grow to over 30 million tons by 2030. Industry uses hydrogen for fossil fuel refining, treating metals, and food processing. Hydrogen is currently produced primarily from steam methane reforming using fossil fuel as a heat source. Hydrogen can also be produced by various processes using a high temperature gas-cooled reactor as the primary energy source.

Use of nuclear energy as the heat source of a large-scale hydrogen production operation would result in substantially lower carbon emissions over a natural gas fired steam methane reforming operation. Nuclear power plants are also capable of co-generating electricity and hydrogen which could provide additional commercial flexibility.

Areas of commercial interest in hydrogen include: oil refining, ammonia manufacturing (fertilizer), and methanol production. Hydrogen can be combined with gasoline, ethanol, methanol, or natural gas to increase engine performance and reduce pollution. This increasing demand for hydrogen in the refining sector is driven by the need to produce cleaner transportation fuel for meeting environmental regulations. Hydrogen can be added in the refining process to create a cleaner-burning fuel. 1

1 The Hydrogen-Boosted Gasoline Engine

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