If hydrogen becomes a viable alternative to fossil fuels, Iowa may be in a position to benefit.
Ryan Clark, associate state geologist with the Iowa Geological Survey, said recent research has shown there are certain types of rocks that naturally generate hydrogen gas. “Once the rock type was sort of identified, then people started looking around the world. Well, where are these rock types? And it turns out Iowa has quite a large volume of these rock types that could generate hydrogen,” Clark said. “And to add onto that, there are some rocks that are kind of overlying those that are generating hydrogen that could potentially trap, seal and accumulate a pool of hydrogen.”
About half a dozen companies have contacted the Iowa Geological Survey for information about what may be underground. “Once they have that, then they start building their models and kind of figuring out their next steps,” Clark said. “One of their next steps is doing seismic surveys, so essentially x-raying the earth from the surface. Not drilling a hole or anything.” That can make the exploration phase quite expensive.
Hydrogen is an ingredient for fertilizer and Clark said that appears to be the “near term” market for hydrogen gas extracted from Iowa. “But in the long term it’s viewed as a clean fuel source, so when you add hydrogen into a fuel cell, it generates electricity,” Clark said, “and it’s exhaust is pure water.”
Just like oil and natural gas exraction, it’s estimated companies will have to drill up to 3000 feet to get to hydrogen that’s sitting underground. Clark said some lab experiments suggest injecting water into certain types of underground rocks could also generate hydrogen. “Nothing has been proven yet,” Clark said. “There has not been any hydrogen production from geologic sources in the United States to this date, but there has been some active exploration in Iowa and in Kansas.”
>> In Other News: Hive Hydrogen Selects Game-Changing EU Electrolyser and Ammonia Loop Solution for $5.8Bn Coega Green Ammonia Project
Clark made his comments during a recent interview on the “Iowa Press” program on Iowa PBS.
A company called Koloma has drilled exploratory wells in Webster County. Experts believe underground reservoirs of hydrogen may be found in a “mid-continent” area that stretches along the Great Lakes and through Minnesota, Iowa, Nebraska and into northern Kansas. Fossil fuels are currently used to make the hydrogen used today to refine oil, produce fertilizer, treat steel and make methanol, which is a major ingredient in plastic.
Follow the money flow of climate, technology, and energy investments to uncover new opportunities and jobs.
Inside This Issue 🌬️ Aircapture's Patented Microwave Direct Air Capture Technology Wins Tencent CarbonX 2.0 Award 🗾 Fujifilm, Tokyo Gas and TGES Agree to Supply City Gas Linked to Biomethane Produ...
Inside This Issue ⚡ FuelCell Energy and Fit Energy Announce Strategic Agreement for Up to 380 MW of Clean Power for Data Centers 🧭 China's Renewable Energy Mandates Set the Stage for Expanded Hydr...
Inside This Issue 🚢 Fortescue and CMB.TECH Sign Milestone Agreement for 12 Ammonia Bulkers to Accelerate Zero-Emissions Shipping 🌱 Mati Carbon Hits New Bar for Carbon Removal Certification With Is...
Aircapture's Patented Microwave Direct Air Capture Technology Wins Tencent CarbonX 2.0 Award
Aircapture will use the award to scale its DAC system engineered to reduce the cost of carbon capture at scale BERKELEY, Calif., June 25, 2026 /PRNewswire -- Aircapture, a Berkeley-based direct ai...
Groundwork BioAg Issues First Verified Carbon Credits Under Rootella Carbon® Program
Milestone issuance of high-durability soil carbon credits, the first to be issued under Verra VM0042 standard in the US, delivers highly-scalable carbon removal at a fraction of durable CDR costs. ...
HOPA Ports and the Mississaugas of the Credit Business Corporation (“MCBC”), the entity representing the business development interests of the Mississaugas of the Credit First Nation (“MCFN”), have...
Deep Sky Corporation today announced a strategic investment from Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation (SMBC), supporting the advancement of Japan's carbon dioxide removal (CDR) and direct air captur...
Follow the money flow of climate, technology, and energy investments to uncover new opportunities and jobs.