Biomethane Pyrolysis for the Production of Green Hydrogen as a Replacement for Natural Gas

Biomethane Pyrolysis for the Production of Green Hydrogen as a Replacement for Natural Gas

Watch Now

In this, the second of three interviews with Dr. Uwe Albrecht of Ludwig-Bölkow-Systemtechnik, Stephen B. Harrsion asks Dr. Albrecht to explain more about biomethane pyrolysis and green hydrogen.

Follow the link for the first interview, which focusses on the gasification of biomethane for the production of green hydrogen, or click through to the final interview, which considers the future of green hydrogen as part of the energy transition.

More on the speakers

Author headshot

Dr Uwe Albrecht

Ludwig-Bölkow-Systemtechnik

Experienced professional with profound business, technology, and management background. Creative hands-on manager with strong leadership and analytical ability as well as cross-cultural and soft skills. In-depth energy sector expertise. Successful track record as an international venture capital investor in industry and energy. Focus areas: Strategy and technology consulting. Sustainable energy and mobility. Innovation management and Venture Capital financing.

More on the moderators

Author headshot

Stephen B. Harrison

sbh4 GmbH

Stephen B. Harrison is an independent consultant. An area of focus for his practice is gas analysers and their application in industrial processes and for environmental management. His experience in this sector has been built up through almost 20 years working with specialty gases at BOC Gases and Linde Gas. He provides M&A advisory due diligence support for investors in the sector and marketing & PR services for instrumentation OEMs.

Explore Our Other Sites

Labmate Online
Compact chilling/heating dry bath for robotic workflows
Explore more Arrow
Envirotech Online
WEBINAR: Delivering certainty for Section 82 with continuous water quality monitoring
Explore more Arrow
Petro Online
Promotion strengthens engineering leadership team
Explore more Arrow
Chromatography Today
Chromatography and XFEL imaging reveal critical point behind water’s behaviour
Explore more Arrow