Guy V
Member
Not really. The real question is how to make it economically competitive. Compressed hydrogen is not the only way to store and release it. Productive research on that is already being applied in multiple cases.The real question is, what is the cost of per kg of H2 compressed to the required PSI.
Getting down to the very fundamentals, we should be learning as much as we can about how to utilize the most readily abundant resources available to us: sunlight, hydrogen and oxygen. The hydrogen/oxygen combination is extremely versatile. You can burn it for heat, explode it for compression force, and combine it in reactions to produce electricity. Hydrogen is also effective in other chemical reactions. In fact, if we could just learn how to manage nuclear fusion most all of our energy problems would be solved.