Low EmissionsWhen hydrogen combusts and releases energy, water is the only byproduct.
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VersatileHydrogen can be used for transportation, electricity generation and industry which are all considered difficult to decarbonize.
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Energy StorageExcess renewable electricity can be used to create renewable hydrogen and stored for use later, helping to solve the renewable energy storage challenge.
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ReliableSolar and wind power is intermittent. Hydrogen is available in times of low sun, nights and when the wind isn't blowing, adding a reliable fuel source to the green-energy mix.
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Setting StandardsCommitted to safety and reliability, Southwest Gas is working hard to establish hydrogen-blending standards to implement throughout our service territory. One such step took place in November of 2020 when Southwest Gas and several peer utilities filed a joint hydrogen-blending application with the California Public Utilities Commission which will serve as a roadmap for the Company moving forward.
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Testing Hydrogen BlendingSouthwest Gas is working with our customers, partners and research organizations to study hydrogen blending for electricity co-generation, transportation, home and industrial appliance use, and manufacturing. One such study involves a partnership between Southwest Gas and Arizona State University’s Global Institute of Sustainability and Innovation in which Southwest training facilities in Arizona will be used to test hydrogen blending on a closed natural gas distribution system with common natural gas appliances and facilities.
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Pioneering Power-to-GasThe Desert Southwest is rapidly developing solar and wind renewable energy projects, taking full advantage of the area’s abundant sunlight and breezy afternoons. As more and more renewable energy is made available, the question of how to store the excess renewable energy becomes increasingly important. That's why Southwest Gas is working with regulators, peer utilities, renewable project developers and our customers to pave the way for excess renewable energy to be converted to green hydrogen through electrolysis by making power-to-gas a not-so-distant future reality.
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