As the world moves to clean energy, investing in clean technologies will help ensure Canada remains a global energy leader. Ultra-low carbon sources of energy such as hydrogen, wind, solar, hydro and nuclear power are key to driving down energy costs for Canadians and to seizing the enormous economic opportunities that are available in all regions of the country.
Today, the Honourable Jonathan Wilkinson, Minister of Energy and Natural Resources, announced a $9.14 million investment for six projects to support innovation in Canada’s clean hydrogen sector.
Of this funding, $2.74 million was allocated through the Energy Innovation Program, including:
- $1.25 million to the University of British Columbia to develop a pilot plant of its patented pyrolysis technology for low-cost, low-emission hydrogen production.
- $900,000 to Enbridge in Ontario for the Markham Virtual Hydrogen Hybrid Demonstration Project, which aims to demonstrate the use of existing wind and solar assets within Ontario’s power grid to produce renewable hydrogen and reduce power supply intermittency.
- $590,223 to Hydrogen in Motion in British Columbia to generate clean hydrogen with low-pressure solid-state storage, distribution and transport. This project is supported by the Hydrogen Centre of Excellence, a strategic initiative led by Alberta Innovates.
- $1.09 million to Ayrton Energy in Alberta to assess the feasibility of safe, efficient and cost-effective storage and transportation of hydrogen in conventional tanks, trucks and pipelines at ambient temperature and pressure. This project is also supported by the Hydrogen Centre of Excellence.
Funding is also allocated to Clean Fuels Fund projects to advance knowledge of the impacts of blending hydrogen into our existing utility networks. The hydrogen blending study represents an overall investment of up to $6.4 million, including:
- $5 million to Enbridge in Ontario to conduct a System-Wide Hydrogen Blending Study to determine blended hydrogen gas’s feasibility and maximum limits in the Ontario utility’s existing network.
- $1.4 million to Trans Québec & Maritimes Pipeline in Quebec for a study to assess the technical feasibility of blending up to 10-percent hydrogen segments of their existing natural gas transmission system.