Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Amazon installs its first onsite electrolyzer to make clean forklift fuel

Unit from Plug Power will create hydrogen fuel right at a Colorado DC, instead of trucking it in from afar.

plug GMSpringhill_H2Fillrebrand.jpeg

Mega-retailer Amazon has completed the installation of its first electrolyzer system, enabling a sustainable supply of hydrogen fuel for low-emissions forklift trucks at its logistics facility in Aurora, Colorado.

Built by the fuel cell solutions provider Plug Power Inc., the one-megawatt (MW) proton exchange membrane electrolyzer is the first for Amazon and is producing low-carbon hydrogen to fuel more than 225 hydrogen fuel cell-powered forklift trucks at the site, known as DEN8.


The unit uses electricity and water to produce hydrogen, compresses it on site, and stores it in a gaseous hydrogen storage tank. That tank can support a fleet of up to 400 hydrogen fuel cell-powered forklift trucks.

The project is part of a deal that Amazon signed with Plug Power in 2022 to supply 10,950 tons of green hydrogen per year for its transportation and building operations starting in 2025. That is enough annual power for 30,000 forklifts or 800 heavy-duty trucks, and is part of Amazon’s quest to be net-zero carbon by 2040, the company said.

Plug Power has already deployed more than 17,000 fuel cells for Amazon to replace batteries in forklifts at more than 80 fulfillment centers in North America. But most of these locations rely on hydrogen that is produced elsewhere, liquified, and delivered by trucks to an on-site storage and dispensing system.

At the Colorado site, Plug saw an opportunity to avoid the emissions generated by liquifying and transporting hydrogen from one site to another. Instead, the electrolyzer uses available surplus power, since more renewable electricity is generated in that region than the site needs at a given time.

“Hydrogen is an important tool in our efforts to decarbonize our operations by 2040 in support of The Climate Pledge, and we’re excited about our ability to produce hydrogen at Amazon facilities through this partnership with Plug,” Asad Jafry, the director of global hydrogen economy at Amazon, said in a release. “On-site production will make the use of hydrogen even more energy efficient for certain locations and types of facilities.”

 

 

 

Recent

More Stories

ATRI releases annual list of nation’s top truck bottlenecks

ATRI releases annual list of nation’s top truck bottlenecks

New Jersey is home to the most congested freight bottleneck in the country for the seventh straight year, according to research from the American Transportation Research Institute (ATRI), released today.

ATRI’s annual list of the Top 100 Truck Bottlenecks aims to highlight the nation’s most congested highways and help local, state, and federal governments target funding to areas most in need of relief. The data show ways to reduce chokepoints, lower emissions, and drive economic growth, according to the researchers.

Keep ReadingShow less

Featured

chart of warehouse rents

Colliers: warehouse construction rates return to pre-pandemic levels

It’s getting a little easier to find warehouse space in the U.S., as the frantic construction pace of recent years declined to pre-pandemic levels in the fourth quarter of 2024, in line with rising vacancies, according to a report from real estate firm Colliers.

Those trends played out as the gap between new building supply and tenants’ demand narrowed during 2024, the firm said in its “U.S. Industrial Market Outlook Report / Q4 2024.” By the numbers, developers delivered 400 million square feet for the year, 34% below the record 607 million square feet completed in 2023. And net absorption, a key measure of demand, declined by 27%, to 168 million square feet.

Keep ReadingShow less
chart of trucking costs per mile

Uber Freight: Trump tariffs will likely be avoided after pause ends in March

As U.S. businesses count down the days until the expiration of the Trump Administration’s monthlong pause of tariffs on Canada and Mexico, a report from Uber Freight says the tariffs will likely be avoided through an extended agreement, since the potential for damaging consequences would be so severe for all parties.

If the tariffs occurred, they could push U.S. inflation higher, adding $1,000 to $1,200 to the average person's cost of living. And relief from interest rates would likely not come to the rescue, since inflation is already above the Fed's target, delaying further rate cuts.

Keep ReadingShow less
chart of container imports at US ports

Descartes: U.S. container imports reached a record for the month of January

Against a backdrop of tariff volatility and uncertain business conditions, U.S. container imports reached a record for the month of January at 2,487,470 TEUs (twenty foot equivalent units), according to a report from supply chain software vendor Descartes.

The surge comes as the U.S. imposed a new 10% tariff on Chinese goods as of February 4, while pausing a more aggressive 25% tariffs on imports from Mexico and Canada until March, Descartes said in its “February Global Shipping Report.”

Keep ReadingShow less
supply chain pro using multiple screens

Cofactr acquires Factor.io to speed procurement for hardware manufacturers

Supply chain software vendor Cofactr said Thursday that it has acquired the AI-based solution provider Factor.io in a move it said will enable faster procurement and reduce logistical delays for its clients.

According to Cofactr, Factor.io automates the ordering and tracking of manufacturers’ complete list of materials, components and parts—across the hundreds of suppliers that produce and assemble them—so they can more efficiently move from sourcing and shipping to finished goods.

Keep ReadingShow less