Xcel Energy will build a pilot hydrogen plant at one of its two Minnesota nuclear facilities, an effort to bolster the long-term of viability of atomic power and produce hydrogen without using fossil fuels.
To fund the pilot, Xcel was recently awarded a $10.5 million grant from the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE). Xcel's pilot plant is the second phase of a novel project announced a year ago, which is led by the DOE's Idaho National Laboratories.
"It just makes sense for us to look at this," said Tim O'Connor, Xcel's chief generation officer. Xcel will put $2 million of its own money into the project.
If the pilot moves to commercialization, the company would be able to offset declining nuclear electricity revenue by producing hydrogen without emitting greenhouse gases. Now, hydrogen is primarily produced with natural gas.
Hydrogen has many industrial markets, including oil refining and fertilizer production. It could also play a key role in future decarbonizing efforts, notably via hydrogen fuel cells for vehicles.
Xcel plans to do engineering and planning work on the pilot plant through next year, with construction expected to start in 2022. It is projected to come online in 2023.
Xcel hasn't decided yet whether the hydrogen pilot will be at its Monticello or Prairie Island nuclear plants, though the latter seems more likely.
Xcel's pilot plant would use an electric current to separate water into its components of hydrogen and oxygen, a process known as electrolysis. Xcel will employ "high-temperature" electrolysis by using steam from its nuclear power production.