The post L.A. Kicks Coal As It Fires Up The World’s Largest Green Hydrogen Power Plant appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass announces the end of the city getting electricity from coal. Alan Ohnsman via Forbes Los Angeles has officially stopped using electricity generated from coal and is about to fire up the first large-scale plant making power from both green hydrogen and natural gas as the second-largest U.S. city works to get all of its energy from carbon-free sources by 2035. “I can officially say that Los Angeles is no longer powered by coal-fueled energy,” Mayor Karen Bass said at a briefing on Thursday, joined by the head of LADWP, the country’s biggest municipal utility, and other officials. “Last week, the Intermountain Power Project in Utah delivered the last coal-fueled energy to our city.” Starting in January, that same facility in Delta, Utah, will instead send electricity to Los Angeles generated from turbines powered by combusting a blend of natural gas and hydrogen. Initially, the goal is to run a mix of 70% gas and 30% hydrogen. But over time, the city-owned utility plans to transition to 100% hydrogen, made from water and renewable power on site and stored in a vast underground salt cavern adjacent to the plant, said David Hanson, who manages power projects for the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power. “We’ve used the Intermountain Power Project since the 1980s. It’s built on top of a salt cavern. They knew it all along, but no one really cared,” Hanson told Forbes. The utility’s partners in the project are already making hydrogen and storing it in the cavern, which Hanson said is about the size of the Empire State Building. “It makes an excellent, leak-proof storage place for hydrogen.” The Intermountain Power Project, which previously generated electricity for Los Angeles from coal, has been modified to make it from hydrogen and natural gas.… The post L.A. Kicks Coal As It Fires Up The World’s Largest Green Hydrogen Power Plant appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass announces the end of the city getting electricity from coal. Alan Ohnsman via Forbes Los Angeles has officially stopped using electricity generated from coal and is about to fire up the first large-scale plant making power from both green hydrogen and natural gas as the second-largest U.S. city works to get all of its energy from carbon-free sources by 2035. “I can officially say that Los Angeles is no longer powered by coal-fueled energy,” Mayor Karen Bass said at a briefing on Thursday, joined by the head of LADWP, the country’s biggest municipal utility, and other officials. “Last week, the Intermountain Power Project in Utah delivered the last coal-fueled energy to our city.” Starting in January, that same facility in Delta, Utah, will instead send electricity to Los Angeles generated from turbines powered by combusting a blend of natural gas and hydrogen. Initially, the goal is to run a mix of 70% gas and 30% hydrogen. But over time, the city-owned utility plans to transition to 100% hydrogen, made from water and renewable power on site and stored in a vast underground salt cavern adjacent to the plant, said David Hanson, who manages power projects for the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power. “We’ve used the Intermountain Power Project since the 1980s. It’s built on top of a salt cavern. They knew it all along, but no one really cared,” Hanson told Forbes. The utility’s partners in the project are already making hydrogen and storing it in the cavern, which Hanson said is about the size of the Empire State Building. “It makes an excellent, leak-proof storage place for hydrogen.” The Intermountain Power Project, which previously generated electricity for Los Angeles from coal, has been modified to make it from hydrogen and natural gas.…

L.A. Kicks Coal As It Fires Up The World’s Largest Green Hydrogen Power Plant

Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass announces the end of the city getting electricity from coal.

Alan Ohnsman via Forbes

Los Angeles has officially stopped using electricity generated from coal and is about to fire up the first large-scale plant making power from both green hydrogen and natural gas as the second-largest U.S. city works to get all of its energy from carbon-free sources by 2035.

“I can officially say that Los Angeles is no longer powered by coal-fueled energy,” Mayor Karen Bass said at a briefing on Thursday, joined by the head of LADWP, the country’s biggest municipal utility, and other officials. “Last week, the Intermountain Power Project in Utah delivered the last coal-fueled energy to our city.”

Starting in January, that same facility in Delta, Utah, will instead send electricity to Los Angeles generated from turbines powered by combusting a blend of natural gas and hydrogen. Initially, the goal is to run a mix of 70% gas and 30% hydrogen. But over time, the city-owned utility plans to transition to 100% hydrogen, made from water and renewable power on site and stored in a vast underground salt cavern adjacent to the plant, said David Hanson, who manages power projects for the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power.

“We’ve used the Intermountain Power Project since the 1980s. It’s built on top of a salt cavern. They knew it all along, but no one really cared,” Hanson told Forbes. The utility’s partners in the project are already making hydrogen and storing it in the cavern, which Hanson said is about the size of the Empire State Building. “It makes an excellent, leak-proof storage place for hydrogen.”

The Intermountain Power Project, which previously generated electricity for Los Angeles from coal, has been modified to make it from hydrogen and natural gas.

Getty Images

It’s the single largest green hydrogen project “in the world, and it’s operational now,” he said.

L.A.’s power experiment comes at a time when the outlook for carbon-free green hydrogen, at least in the U.S., has dimmed. It’s more expensive to produce compared to making industrial hydrogen by splitting natural gas, which is cheap but produces large amounts of byproduct carbon pollution. The Trump administration also hasn’t been supportive, cancelling federal funding for so-called hydrogen hubs in California and the Pacific Northwest that were intended to improve large-scale production and use of clean hydrogen.

Still, L.A.’s project has been in the works since 2022, when it won a $504 million loan guarantee from Biden’s Energy Department for the Utah facility, with its equipment already installed and running. Its electrolyzers which split water, a process that releases only oxygen as a byproduct, were supplied by the U.S. arm of Mitsubishi Power and sourced from China, said Kevin Peng, an LADWP project director.

“At the scale we were building – 220 megawatts – there was no facility anywhere in the United States that could supply them,” he said. When the first phase is fully operational, the system will produce 21 million kilograms of hydrogen a year.

When hydrogen is used in a fuel cell to make carbon-free electricity, such as in spacecraft or cars like Toyota’s Mirai sedan, water is the only byproduct. When burned, however, it produces water as well as nitrogen oxides (NOx), an air pollutant. But LADWP is convinced that conventional pollution-filtering systems already used at natural gas power plants can handle it.

“There’s a misconception around how much emissions actually come out of hydrogen,” Peng said. The Utah plant will use the latest selective catalytic reduction systems to keep NOx and all the other emissions “way below permitting limits. Plus, we get the added benefit of zero CO2,” he said.

And that’s the city’s ultimate goal, Bass said. “In 2003, L.A.’s energy supply was 3% renewable energy and over 50% coal,” she said. “Today, just over 20 years later, our city is powered by 60% carbon-free energy and again, 0% coal.”

More From Forbes

ForbesWhy Hydrogen Still Matters In A Warming WorldForbesFinally A Framework For Clean Hydrogen SubsidiesForbesGreen Hydrogen’s Hype Hits Some Very Expensive Hurdles

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/alanohnsman/2025/12/04/la-kicks-coal-as-it-fires-up-the-worlds-largest-green-hydrogen-power-plant/

Market Opportunity
Power Protocol Logo
Power Protocol Price(POWER)
$0.1513
$0.1513$0.1513
-2.17%
USD
Power Protocol (POWER) Live Price Chart
Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

Strive Finalizes Semler Deal, Expands Its Corporate Bitcoin Treasury

Strive Finalizes Semler Deal, Expands Its Corporate Bitcoin Treasury

Strive had finalized its acquisition of Semler scientific after securing the approval of shareholders earlier in the week. The final deal brought both firms’ Bitcoin
Share
Tronweekly2026/01/17 12:30
Why 2026 Is The Year That Caribbean Mixology Will Finally Get Its Time In The Sun

Why 2026 Is The Year That Caribbean Mixology Will Finally Get Its Time In The Sun

The post Why 2026 Is The Year That Caribbean Mixology Will Finally Get Its Time In The Sun appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. San Juan, Puerto Rico’s La Factoría
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2026/01/17 12:24
EUR/CHF slides as Euro struggles post-inflation data

EUR/CHF slides as Euro struggles post-inflation data

The post EUR/CHF slides as Euro struggles post-inflation data appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. EUR/CHF weakens for a second straight session as the euro struggles to recover post-Eurozone inflation data. Eurozone core inflation steady at 2.3%, headline CPI eases to 2.0% in August. SNB maintains a flexible policy outlook ahead of its September 25 decision, with no immediate need for easing. The Euro (EUR) trades under pressure against the Swiss Franc (CHF) on Wednesday, with EUR/CHF extending losses for the second straight session as the common currency struggles to gain traction following Eurozone inflation data. At the time of writing, the cross is trading around 0.9320 during the American session. The latest inflation data from Eurostat showed that Eurozone price growth remained broadly stable in August, reinforcing the European Central Bank’s (ECB) cautious stance on monetary policy. The Core Harmonized Index of Consumer Prices (HICP), which excludes volatile items such as food and energy, rose 2.3% YoY, in line with both forecasts and the previous month’s reading. On a monthly basis, core inflation increased by 0.3%, unchanged from July, highlighting persistent underlying price pressures in the bloc. Meanwhile, headline inflation eased to 2.0% YoY in August, down from 2.1% in July and slightly below expectations. On a monthly basis, prices rose just 0.1%, missing forecasts for a 0.2% increase and decelerating from July’s 0.2% rise. The inflation release follows last week’s ECB policy decision, where the central bank kept all three key interest rates unchanged and signaled that policy is likely at its terminal level. While officials acknowledged progress in bringing inflation down, they reiterated a cautious, data-dependent approach going forward, emphasizing the need to maintain restrictive conditions for an extended period to ensure price stability. On the Swiss side, disinflation appears to be deepening. The Producer and Import Price Index dropped 0.6% in August, marking a sharp 1.8% annual decline. Broader inflation remains…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 03:08