Hydrogenics Corporation announced that it, along with a European consortium consisting of SINTEF, the Université Bourgogne Franche-Comté, Tecnalia, UniSannio, Varanger Kraft and KES will deliver a 2.5-megawatt electrolyzer-based energy storage system directly connected to a 45-megawatt wind farm in Norway. Varanger Kraft’s wind farm, located in Raggovidda, is already one of the most efficient in Europe. However, due to limitations within the local transmission grid, the project’s capacity of 200 megawatts cannot currently be realized. The consortium – named Haeolus – will enable the production of clean hydrogen using some of the excess power produced from wind in the region. Hydrogenics’ PEM-based electrolyzers are customizable and scalable for multi-megawatt applications – without sacrificing efficiency, response or durability – and the compactness of the Company’s technology delivers energy storage in a significantly smaller plant footprint. The Haeolus system will be remotely controlled and monitored due to environmental conditions at the wind farm and lack of accessibility during winter, when the area is covered by a thick layer of snow. The Haeolus project receives funding from the Fuel Cells and Hydrogen 2 Joint Undertaking task force under grant agreement No. 779469. This Joint Undertaking initiative also receives support from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program, the Hydrogen Europe Industry, and Hydrogen Europe Research.