The Federal Hydrogen Hub Community Guide

The Federal Hydrogen Hub Program

A detailed overview of the Hydrogen Hub Program, including descriptions of each of the seven Hubs selected by DOE to negotiate for funding

Map of the locations of the seven federal Hydrogen Hubs.

This resource is part of the Federal Hydrogen Hub Community Guide.

The federal government’s goal for the Hydrogen Hub Program is to create a hydrogen network that spans the country.

Each Hub will include hydrogen producers, hydrogen users, and infrastructure to transport hydrogen between the two.

The Dept. of Energy and the Hubs have shared limited information with the public so far.

  • Each Hub has said it will create jobs and provide other local benefits, including other economic benefits like new funding for businesses and workforce training programs, and environmental benefits from pollution reductions.
  • But publicly available details on the proposed Hubs include many projects that would increase both climate and community-level pollution, waste energy, and delay better climate solutions.
  • Accurately assessing potential benefits and harms will not be possible until significantly more detail on Hub projects is made available.

DOE will award funding across four phases over the next 8-12 years. At the end of each phase, DOE will decide whether to continue or stop funding each Hub and specific projects within them.

Phase 1:
Detailed Plan

1¼ years*

Phase 2:
Project Development

2½ years*

Phase 3:
Implement & Construct

3½ years*

Phase 4:
Ramp-Up & Operate

3 years*

* Approximate time to complete phase

This detailed graphic from DOE shows the activities that are supposed to take place during each of the four phases. Each phase provides opportunities for communities and advocates to push for just outcomes, and DOE says it will consider community input when making its funding decisions:

The Department of Energy will award funding for Hydrogen Hub projects across four phases. This chart from the DOE shows activities that are supposed to take place during each of the four phases.

Summary of activities and outcomes in each of the four phases. View full-size graphic. (Dept. of Energy)

Phase 1 begins after each Hub completes its initial negotiations with DOE. According to DOE, communities can expect Hubs to take the following actions (among others) during Phase 1:

  • Release more information on Hub plans and projects to the public;
  • Engage directly with impacted communities;
  • Release summaries of community commitments (DOE described this summary for a different DOE program as an example of how the summaries might look).

DOE has also said that Hub projects will not seek permits or begin construction during Phase 1, and that failure to meet DOE goals for Phase 1 (including robust community engagement) will affect whether DOE continues to fund a Hub in future phases.

The Seven Proposed Hydrogen Hubs

As of mid-August 2024, details about the seven Hydrogen Hubs are limited and largely based on DOE’s September 2022 Funding Opportunity Announcement for the Hydrogen Hub Program and October 2023 briefing on the Hubs, as well as specific DOE briefings on each of the Hubs, linked below. This section highlights key details from those briefings, including what Hub claims about the benefits of their projects. Hubs could end up providing more, less, or different benefits.

For questions or concerns about the Hubs, we encourage you to contact Suzanne Baker, DOE’s Stakeholder Engagement Lead for the Hydrogen Hub Program, at suzanne.baker@hq.doe.gov, in addition to the Hub-specific contacts provided below.

Appalachian Hydrogen Hub (ARCH2)

In West Virginia, Ohio, and Pennsylvania

Funding: Up to $925 million

Status: In July 2024, DOE awarded ARCH2 with $30M for Phase 1 activities, which are expected to last up to 36 months and include planning, design, and community and labor engagement.

Production:

  • Fossil fuels in a process that includes carbon capture technology and CO2 storage for seven of ten production facilities.
  • Also some production from water and biomass/food waste. Biomass refers to wood, crops, animal waste, and other material from plants and animals that can be burned to create energy.

Uses:

  • Fuel for trucks and public transit
  • Ammonia production
  • Electricity generation
  • Residential uses
  • Industrial uses

Other Hub projects:

  • New hydrogen pipelines and fueling stations
  • Permanent CO2 storage

Community Benefits Plan:

  • Jobs
  • Creation of Community Benefits Advisory Board and Community Benefits Steering Committee
  • Local stakeholder input on specific projects
  • A public data-reporting platform

Resources & Contact
   • DOE ARCH2 Webpage
   • DOE ARCH2 Community Briefing
   • DOE Contact: AppalachianH2Hub@hq.doe.gov

California Hydrogen Hub (ARCHES)

Funding: Up to $1.2 billion

Status: In July 2024, DOE awarded ARCHES with $30M for Phase 1 activities, which are expected to last up to 18 months and include planning, analysis, design, and stakeholder engagement.

Production:

Uses:

  • Fuel for trucks, port equipment, and public transit
  • Electricity generation

Other Hub projects:

  • New heavy-duty hydrogen fueling stations
  • 165 miles of pipeline

Community Benefits Plan: A copy of ARCHES’ Community Benefits Plan is available online.

  • Jobs
  • Creation of Community Benefits Working Group at the Hub-level to advise on impacts and benefits, independent Community Benefits Auditing Team to track and publicly report on benefits, and Local Community Working Groups for specific Hub projects
  • Project Labor Agreements and Community Benefits Agreements/Plans
  • A public data-reporting platform

Resources & Contact
   • DOE ARCHES Webpage
   • DOE ARCHES Community Briefing
   • DOE Contact: CaliforniaH2Hub@hq.doe.gov

Gulf Coast Hydrogen Hub (HyVelocity H2Hub)

In Texas

Funding: Up to $1.2 billion

Status: In negotiations with DOE as of mid-August 2024, no funding awarded.

Production:

Uses:

  • In oil refineries and petrochemical facilities (using hydrogen to produce fuels, chemicals, and plastic products)
  • Fuel (including methanol) for trucks and marine vessels
  • Ammonia production
  • Electricity generation

Other Hub projects:

  • New hydrogen pipelines and fueling stations
  • Hydrogen and CO2 storage in salt caverns

Community Benefits Plan:

  • Jobs
  • Creation of Community Advisory Board
  • Air pollution reductions

Resources & Contact
   • DOE HyVelocity Hub Community Briefing
   • DOE Contact: GulfCoastH2Hub@hq.doe.gov

Heartland Hydrogen Hub

In Minnesota, North Dakota, and South Dakota

Funding: Up to $925 million

Status: In negotiations with DOE as of mid-August 2024, no funding awarded.

Production:

Uses:

  • Ammonia production
  • Electricity generation

Other Hub projects:

  • New hydrogen pipelines

Community Benefits Plan:

  • Jobs
  • Creation of an education consortium to oversee education and training initiative
  • Contracting opportunities for businesses owned by women, minorities, disabled veterans, disadvantaged communities, or LGBTQ persons

Resources & Contact
   • DOE Heartland Hub Community Briefing
   • DOE Contact: HeartlandH2Hub@hq.doe.gov

Mid-Atlantic Hydrogen Hub (MACH2)

In Pennsylvania, Delaware, and New Jersey

Funding: Up to $750 million

Status: In negotiations with DOE as of mid-August 2024, no funding awarded.

Production:

Uses:

  • Truck fuel
  • Electricity generation

Other Hub projects:

  • Expanded pipeline infrastructure
  • New hydrogen refueling stations

Community Benefits Plan:

  • Jobs
  • Project Labor Agreements for all Hub projects
  • Investments in regional Workforce Development Boards and technical and professional development initiatives

Resources & Contact
   • DOE MACH2 Community Briefing
   • DOE Contact: MidAtlanticH2Hub@hq.doe.gov

Midwest Hydrogen Hub (MachH2)

In Illinois, Indiana, and Michigan

Funding: Up to $1 billion

Status: In negotiations with DOE as of mid-August 2024, no funding awarded.

Production:

Uses:

  • Steel manufacturing and refining
  • Truck fuel
  • Electricity generation
  • “Sustainable aviation fuel” production

Other Hub projects:

  • New hydrogen pipelines and hydrogen refueling stations

Community Benefits Plan:

  • Jobs
  • Contracting targets for minority/disadvantaged businesses
  • Investments in startups and worker education

Resources & Contact
   • DOE MachH2 Community Briefing
   • DOE Contact: MidwestH2Hub@hq.doe.gov

Pacific Northwest Hydrogen Hub (PNWH2)

In Washington, Oregon, and Montana

Funding: Up to $1 billion

Status: In July 2024, DOE awarded PNWH2 with $27.5M for Phase 1 activities. Phase 1 is expected to last 12-18 months and include planning, analysis, design, and community and labor engagement.

Production:

  • From water using 95% carbon-free energy and 100% carbon-free energy by 2035

Uses:

  • In oil refineries and data centers
  • Fuel for trucks, port equipment, and public transit
  • Electricity generation
  • Long-duration energy storage

Other Hub projects:

  • Fueling stations and pipelines

Community Benefits Plan:

  • Hub-level Community Benefits Committee and “node-level” Community Advisory Boards
  • Jobs
  • Community Benefits Agreements/Good Neighbor Agreements
  • Negotiation of Project Labor Agreements for all Hub projects over $1 million
  • Community Workforce Agreements
  • Investments in worker training

Resources & Contact
   • DOE PNWH2 Webpage
   • DOE PNWH2 Community Briefing
   • DOE Contact: PacificNWH2Hub@hq.doe.gov

Community Benefits Plans

Each Hydrogen Hub must create and comply with its own Community Benefits Plan. DOE has published Guidance on these Plans that includes strong expectations for how Hubs engage, impact, and stay accountable to communities. Among other criteria, Hubs’ Community Benefits Plans are supposed to:

  • Demonstrate how Hubs will meaningfully engage communities early, often, and throughout the Hydrogen Hub Program.
  • Identify concrete steps to provide benefits and minimize negative impacts to communities, particularly environmental justice communities.
  • Detail how Hubs will measure, track, and report on their engagement, benefits, and negative impacts.

The degree to which Hubs will be held accountable to these criteria and expectations, and the specific ways in which DOE will enforce them, remain to be seen.

Common Types of Hydrogen Hub Projects

Hydrogen Production

  • Industrial facilities that produce hydrogen from fossil fuels through a process called methane reformation.
  • Facilities that produce hydrogen from water through a process called electrolysis that is powered by electricity.
  • Facilities that produce hydrogen from biomass through gasification or methane reformation.
→ In this Guide: Projects that Produce Hydrogen

Hydrogen Use

For power or heat in:

For high-heat industrial processes, like steel manufacturing

For chemical manufacturing in industrial facilities that produce:

→ In this Guide: Projects that Use Hydrogen

Transportation / Storage

Of hydrogen in:

Of CO2 in:

  • Pipelines that carry CO2 produced and captured at hydrogen industrial facilities to a storage site
  • Storage sites (which are often geological storage sites where CO2 is injected underground)
→ In this Guide: Projects that Transport or Store Hydrogen

Carbon capture refers to a set of industrial technologies designed to reduce CO2 emissions at the source (i.e., smokestack) of a facility and prevent on-site CO2 emissions from entering the atmosphere. See full definition.

CO2 storage, also known as sequestration, can refer to different things. When discussed in this guide, CO2 storage refers to storage in saline aquifers, which are deep underground and filled with salty water (brine).

Biomass can be processed and used in ways that lead to meaningful decarbonization, but also in ways that increase carbon emissions.

Exposure to ammonia can irritate the nose, throat, and respiratory tract, which can also lead to respiratory issues.

Electrolysis is used to split water into hydrogen and oxygen. See full definition.

Gasification is a process through which complex carbon-based materials are converted into syngas, a gas mixture composed of carbon oxides and hydrogen gas. See full definition.

Updated on October 11, 2024

Maps and graphics by Casey Chin / Earthjustice. Basemap data sources: Esri, HERE, Garmin, FAO, NOAA, USGS, EPA.

This guide is intended for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. The information contained herein is not a substitute for professional legal counsel. Please consult with an attorney to discuss your specific legal needs.

Questions? For questions or feedback on this Guide, please contact us at webmaster@earthjustice.org

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