Hydrogen Fueling Station at Hickam

  • Published
  • By Tech. Sgt. Shane A. Cuomo
  • Air Force Print News
As the largest consumer of petroleum products in the DoD, Air Force Secretary Michael Wynne has made it a priority for the Air Force to find alternative fuels to replace fossil fuels. In a partnership with the State of Hawaii, Hickam is implementing Secretary Wynne's directive and is leading the way with its hydrogen production and fuel station.

At the forefront of energy conservation the hydrogen fueling station is a joint green energy initiative between the Hawaiian Center for Advanced Transportation Technology and the Air Force's Advanced Power Technology office. Hickam has become the center of excellence for all hydrogen research in the DoD and the State of Hawaii.

"The opening of the United States Air Force's hydrogen station is a major milestone for the state of Hawaii and for the nation," said State of Hawaii governor Linda Lingle.

Opened in Nov. of this year the hydrogen station is relatively small but is playing a large roll in the way the Air Force thinks about energy conservation; now and in the future.

"The future is to have complete 100 percent renewable resources, meaning not burning any of our natural resources to generate energy. You can take wind power, you can take solar power and use that electricity to break down water into hydrogen and use the hydrogen to fuel our vehicles," said HydraFLX systems operations engineer Tye Parrish.

Like the rest of the Air Force the hydrogen station has the ability to be packed up and deployed anywhere.

"The beautiful thing about this system, to support the war fighter on the ground, we don't have to take the whole system. We can generate hydrogen at a safe location, put the hydrogen in the vessel, load the vessel on a C-17 or other transport and transport it wherever we want it, " said Parrish.

The small hydrogen plant a Hickam is the starting point for the Air Force as it researches ways to find new energy sources. It is also the spearhead for the DoD's fight to conserve energy, create cleaner air and to break its dependence on fossil fuel.