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Amogy and Trafigura study using ammonia to transport clean hydrogen

US-based ammonia power solutions company Amogy has entered into an agreement with commodity trader Trafigura to study the use of ammonia as a carrier to transport clean hydrogen.

Michele Labrut, Americas Correspondent

September 22, 2022

1 Min Read
Ammonia NH3 molecule
Image: Pixabay

The finding of this joint research will help support industry-wide efforts to decarbonise transport and heavy industrial processes and lower carbon emissions to meet global climate goals, the partners said.

Amogy and Trafigura seek to identify and assess scenarios in which ammonia cracking technology can be deployed to support the growing hydrogen market, starting with Europe which is targeting 20m tonnes of hydrogen consumption by 2030. The two companies will determine the viability and cost-effectiveness of industrial-scale ammonia crackers.

“Our partnership with Trafigura opens up tremendous opportunities for the Amogy team to better understand and explore our platform’s potential benefits at scale,” said Seonghoon Woo, Chief Executive and Co-founder at Amogy. 

“At Trafigura, we recognize that hydrogen will need to be transported over long distances, from regions rich in renewable power to demand hubs. Ammonia is a cost-competitive carrier of hydrogen which will require cracking at a destination to cater to different end uses, said Margaux Moore, Head of Energy Transition Research at Trafigura.

“We believe ammonia cracking will be a key enabling technology for the large-scale uptake of clean hydrogen. Our work with Amogy will help us understand the economics of this supply chain, to deliver the most competitive low carbon hydrogen to our customers."

Related:Ammonia and hydrogen fuel safety challenges flagged-up

About the Author

Michele Labrut

Americas Correspondent

Michèle Labrut is a long-time Panama resident, a journalist and correspondent, and has continuously covered the maritime sector of Central & Latin America.

Michèle first came to Panama as a press attaché to the French Embassy and then returned to the isthmus as a foreign correspondent in the 1980s.

Author of Seatrade Maritime's annual Panama Maritime Review magazine and of several books, Michèle also wrote for Time magazine, The Miami Herald, NBC News and the Economist Intelligence Unit. She has also collaborated in making several documentaries for the BBC and European and U.S. television networks.

Michèle's profession necessitates a profound knowledge of the country, but her acumen is not from necessity alone, but a genuine passion for Panama.

In 2012 she was awarded the Order of Merit (Knight grade) by the French Government for her services to international journalism and in 2021 the upgrade to Chevalier grade.

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