Hydrogen as Utility Gas: Hydricity, and the Invisible Flame

Launched in 2005, Tokyo’s Fuel Cell Expo has rapidly evolved into the world’s biggest showcase for fuel cell technology. The 2010 expo was no exception: some 2,300 professionals from sixty-six countries—from Argentina to Vietnam—showed up for the technical conference, close to 400 companies exhibite...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inTomorrow's Energy p. 231
Main Author Hoffmann, Peter
Format Book Chapter
LanguageEnglish
Published United States MIT Press 2012
The MIT Press
Edition2
Subjects
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Summary:Launched in 2005, Tokyo’s Fuel Cell Expo has rapidly evolved into the world’s biggest showcase for fuel cell technology. The 2010 expo was no exception: some 2,300 professionals from sixty-six countries—from Argentina to Vietnam—showed up for the technical conference, close to 400 companies exhibited products and services, and more than 80,000 visitors jostled for three days at the beginning of March through the crowded aisles and exhibitors’ booths. For a seasoned American operative like Robert Rose, the executive director of the Washington, D.C.-based U.S. Fuel Cell Council and the conference’s lead-off speaker, there was no question that commercialization
ISBN:9780262516952
0262516950
DOI:10.7551/mitpress/8625.003.0011