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A fuel cell is an electrochemical energy conversion device. Fuel cells differ from batteries in that they are designed for continuous replenishment of the reactants consumed. This is a partial list of companies currently producing commercially available fuel cell systems for use in residential, commercial, or industrial settings.
From the 1970s to 1990s, with sponsorship from U.S. military and other utility companies, the company extended to low-temperature fuel cell area and high-temperature carbonate fuel systems, which proved to have greater potential in commercial applications. It completed its IPO in 1992 and was renamed as FuelCell Energy, Inc. It spun off its ...
Pages in category "Fuel cell manufacturers" The following 17 pages are in this category, out of 17 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A. AFC Energy;
Plug Power was founded in 1997 as a joint venture between DTE Energy and Mechanical Technology Inc. The company went public in October 1999. The company was subject to a shareholder class action complaint for securities fraud following the IPO for allegedly misleading statements about their fuel cell technology capabilities and on its material sales and dist
In November 2024, Bloom Energy (NYSE: BE) made a big announcement: It will be supplying a roughly 80-megawatt fuel cell project in South Korea. The project, assuming all goes as planned, will be ...
The company is a founding member of UKH 2 Mobility, a government and industry group aiming to accelerate the commercial roll-out of hydrogen vehicles in 2014/15; [17] It is also a member of the Fuel Cell and Hydrogen Energy Association, the US-based trade association for the fuel cell and hydrogen energy industry, dedicated to the ...
On February 1, 2008, Ballard spun out Automotive Fuel Cell Cooperation (AFCC) [3] to allow for further expansion of fuel cell technology. [4] [5] After the split, Ballard continued as a publicly traded company focusing on non-automotive applications (including buses), while AFCC became a privately held company of 150 employees, developing hydrogen fuel cell stacks for automobiles.
Sridhar and his team built an electrochemical cell for NASA capable of producing air and fuel from electricity generated by a solar panel. In 2011, Bloom was valued at $2.9 billion. [ 8 ] [ 9 ] Initially, the company produced about one fuel cell appliance per day [ 10 ] before opening a factory in Newark, Delaware in April 2012. [ 11 ]