| Current Price |
Course Number |
PDH Online Course Description | PDH Units/ Learning Units (Hours) |
Buy Course |
Take Quiz |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $129
|
D244 |
Ahmad Hammouz, P.Eng. This course delivers a comprehensive, system-wide introduction to the U.S. National Clean Hydrogen Strategy and Roadmap, grounded in the technical, economic, and policy insights developed by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE). Learners will examine how clean hydrogen supports national decarbonization, energy security, industrial competitiveness, and net-zero goals, and explore the technologies, production pathways, infrastructure, and market systems required to scale hydrogen across the economy. The course explains the foundational science of hydrogen production, distribution, storage, and end-use applications. It examines the full spectrum of clean hydrogen pathways including electrolysis, natural-gas-based hydrogen with carbon capture, biomass-derived hydrogen, and emerging innovative methods. Students will gain insight into hydrogen cost drivers, technology readiness levels, the role of DOE’s Hydrogen Shot, and the critical enablers—tax incentives, federal investments, hydrogen hubs, market creation mechanisms, storage solutions, and infrastructure deployment—required to achieve widespread adoption. By integrating cross-cutting themes such as environmental justice, community participation, permitting challenges, supply-chain development, workforce training, and safety considerations, the course equips learners to critically evaluate hydrogen’s role in national energy systems and assess what it will take to scale clean hydrogen production and use across industry, transportation, and power sectors. This course includes a multiple-choice quiz at the end, which is designed to enhance the understanding of the course materials. NY PE & PLS: You must choose courses that are technical in nature or related to matters of laws and ethics contributing to the health and welfare of the public. NY Board does not accept courses related to office management, risk management, leadership, marketing, accounting, financial planning, real estate, and basic CAD. Specific course topics that are on the borderline and are not acceptable by the NY Board have been noted under the course description on our website. |
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