Los Angeles just made energy history. The nation's second-largest city has officially ended its reliance on coal power, and it's replacing that dirty energy with something far more ambitious: the world's largest green hydrogen power plant, backed by underground storage caverns the size of the Empire State Building.
On December 4, 2025, Mayor Karen Bass announced that the city received its final coal delivery from the Intermountain Power Project in Utah. Starting in 2026, that same facility will begin generating electricity using green hydrogen, marking a pivotal shift for both the city and the broader clean energy landscape.
The transformation took two decades. Back in 2003, over half of LA's power came from coal. Today, the city runs on 60% carbon-free energy with coal at zero percent. The Los Angeles Department of Water and Power pulled off this transition through strategic divestments and clean energy investments.
LADWP first divested from the Navajo Generating Station in Arizona in 2016. The Intermountain Power Project was the last holdout. Now, under Mayor Bass, the city has completed its exit from coal entirely.
"This is a defining moment for the City of Los Angeles. L.A.'s coal divestment is not just about discontinuing the use of coal to power our city, it's about building a clean energy economy that benefits every Angeleno."
Mayor Karen Bass, City of Los Angeles
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The revamped facility in Delta, Utah, isn't just any power plant. IPP Renewed represents a $1.7 billion investment in hydrogen-capable generation, with an additional $2.7 billion going toward transmission upgrades. The new plant features two Mitsubishi Power M501JAC gas turbines with 840 MW of combined capacity.
Here's the roadmap: starting Q2 2026, the turbines will run on 70% natural gas and 30% green hydrogen. By 2045, the goal is 100% green hydrogen. This phased approach allows the technology and supply chain to mature while still delivering immediate emissions reductions of 75% compared to coal.
The Intermountain Power Project (IPP) Renewed, detailing the facility's capacity, ownership, and its phased roadmap to becoming a 100% green hydrogen power source by 2045.
Adjacent to the power plant sits the Advanced Clean Energy Storage facility, a joint venture between Chevron (majority owner) and Mitsubishi Power Americas.
The facility uses 220 MW of electrolyzers to produce approximately 100 metric tonnes of green hydrogen daily. That hydrogen gets stored in two massive salt caverns, each roughly the size of the Empire State Building. Combined, these caverns hold 11,000 metric tonnes of hydrogen, equivalent to over 300 GWh of energy storage.
"It makes an excellent, leak-proof storage place for hydrogen."
David Hanson, Manager of Power Projects, LADWP
The project secured a $504 million loan guarantee from the U.S. Department of Energy in 2022. Commercial operations are expected to ramp up through 2025 and 2026.
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LA's hydrogen bet comes at an interesting time. Federal funding for hydrogen hubs in California and the Pacific Northwest has faced setbacks. Yet this project pushes forward, proving that hydrogen-based power generation can work at commercial scale.
The numbers tell the story:
For LA, this project accelerates the path to 100% clean energy by 2035. For the hydrogen industry, it demonstrates that large-scale hydrogen storage and power generation is operational.
What makes this project notable is the partnership model. Utah municipalities retain ownership through the Intermountain Power Agency while LA handles operations. The economic partnership between the two states continues, just without the carbon.
As LADWP's David Hanson noted, the facility sits atop a geological asset, salt caverns, that nobody paid much attention to for decades. Now those caverns are enabling one of the most ambitious clean energy projects in the country. Similar underground storage principles are being explored for carbon storage hubs across the Southwest.
The transition from coal to hydrogen in Delta, Utah is exactly the kind of transformation the energy sector needs: practical, scalable, and already underway.
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