Independent power development company Tenaska is advancing a portfolio of more than 10 carbon capture and sequestration hubs across the US. We spoke with Bret Estep, who heads up the CCS strategy for the firm.
Independent power development company Tenaska is advancing a portfolio of more than 10 carbon capture and sequestration hubs across the US. We spoke with Bret Estep, who heads up the CCS strategy for the firm.
Morgan Stanley is the mandated investment banker for a green ammonia developer that’s raising debt and equity for its first facility in Texas.
A modular green ammonia firm has hired a boutique investment bank and has launched a roughly $150m capital raise.
A technology company with a novel process to convert CO2 into fuels and chemicals is extending a capital raise that previously closed with inputs from several oil and airline majors.
A former executive that developed large hydrogen and ammonia projects in Texas is raising money in a new role with a fusion energy firm with ambitions to co-locate generation with heavy industry and fuels production.
The owners of a proposed colossal ammonia production facility in Appalachian coal country are in the beginning stages of seeking liquidity, EPC contracting, and advisory services for a project they say will ultimately be financed akin to an LNG export terminal.
A decarbonization services provider is in development on multiple utility-owned hydrogen adoption projects in the Northeast, Texas and Georgia and is preparing to launch a capital raise in 3Q24.
A new $1.5bn US-focused flagship fund focused on middle market companies is in discussions with new and existing LPs now and will consider e-fuels and other sustainable molecules in its deployment.
Some states are mulling hydrogen-specific incentives and tax credits as they wait for final federal regulations for clean hydrogen production, Bianca Giacobone reports.
Advanced Ionics, an electrolyzer developer based in the Midwest, is approaching a close on the second tranche of its Series A and is seeking sponsors for pilot projects in Texas and elsewhere.
The company’s Symbiotic electrolyzers use steam by tapping into excess heat from industrial settings, thereby lowering electricity needs for water splitting to 35 kWh per kg, with 30 kWh per kg possible. That compares to industry averages over 50 kWh per kg.