Storing Hydrogen in Salt Caverns Could Help Ensure Reliable, Flexible Power Generation
Posted onUnderground salt caverns containing stores of hydrogen could provide a solution to the problem of back-up electricity generation in the years ahead.
Underground salt caverns containing stores of hydrogen could provide a solution to the problem of back-up electricity generation in the years ahead.
The green light has been given for the expansion of ReFood’s Anaerobic Digestion (AD) plant in Doncaster, South Yorkshire. Costing £1.85 million, the expansion is part of the UK food waste recycling specialist’s Vision 2020 plan, a major programme of investment into food waste recycling facilities as an energy resource in the UK and to achieve zero food waste to landfill by the end of the decade.
Who would have thought that the future of UK energy could have started on a farm in Retford?