Hydrogen startup Verdagy opens San Jose plant at risky moment – The Mercury News

By David R Baker | Bloomberg

A laser-wielding robot hovers over a nickel tray in Verdagy Inc.’s new California factory, inspecting the seams of what will become an electrochemical cell. Rather than a battery, it’s the heart of a machine that could one day fuel a hydrogen-powered economy — if that economy ever arrives.

Startup Verdagy makes electrolyzers, devices that split water into hydrogen and oxygen. The US Department of Energy awarded the company a nearly $40 million grant this spring to help get the plant up and running as part of the Biden administration’s multi-billion-dollar effort to spur production and use of the climate-friendly fuel. Verdagy, which has raised $104 million in venture funding, will celebrate the plant’s opening Wednesday in a cavernous industrial building near San Jose.

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Many analysts see the fuel as key to decarbonizing heavy industry since it can be made and burned without spewing greenhouse gases. But Verdagy begins making cells at a difficult moment for the hydrogen industry. Potential buyers have been slow to adopt the fuel due to the high costs and the need to purchase expensive new machinery to use it. And enough companies — many based in China — now make electrolyzers so that with manufacturing capacity far exceeding demand, according to research firm BloombergNEF.

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