Our CEO, Parker Meeks, will be sharing his insights at ACT Expo 2026 being held in Las Vegas, Nevada. Meeks will contribute his perspective on the panel, “Unlocking the Potential of Hydrogen Fuel Cell Trucks Through Use-Case Centric Approach,” at 11:55 a.m. Tuesday, May 5, in Expo Hall Theater North.
During the panel, Meeks will contribute his perspective on how targeted, application-specific deployment strategies are enabling hydrogen-powered trucks to move from pilot programs into commercially viable solutions for heavy industry and transportation. As these sectors face increasing pressure to reduce emissions, hydrogen-powered vehicles are gaining traction in high-utilization, heavy-load and start-stop applications where electrification alone is not practical. Utility Global’s H2Gen® system provides the fuel needed economically, using organic biogas from landfills and other organic waste to make negative or low-carbon hydrogen from water without outside electricity.
Our team will also be at the Las Vegas Convention Center’s West Hall at booth #1123 showcasing our H2Gen technology. We are ready to share how H2Gen provides an economic pathway for industrial decarbonization, including clean hydrogen for mobility at cost structures that work for fleets.
The proven H2Gen system works by harnessing the electrochemical potential of organic biogas streams that are not economical for any other use, to produce hydrogen from water without utilizing outside electricity. An example of this includes Utility’s first biogas-to-hydrogen project with MAAS Energy in California that will utilize dairy digester off-gas to provide economic hydrogen for fleets at a 3 ton/day scale, matching today’s demand. By not requiring electricity and utilizing biogases in a highly capital efficient design at sub-5 TPD scale H2Gen avoids the challenges other technologies, such as traditional electrolysis and steam methane reforming (SMR) face at a market-ready scale.
“Decarbonization will not be achieved through ambition alone. It requires economically viable solutions that integrate into existing industrial assets and avoid adding electrical load at a capital and carbon efficiency that mobility requires,” said Meeks. “This is particularly challenging for traditional hydrogen production technologies such as electrolysis and steam methane reforming (SMRs), which do not compete well economically at small scale. H2Gen provides the best of both worlds – economics that work well at small scale and a highly modular design that scales easily as demand grows.”
Utility’s presence at ACT Expo underscores the growing role of economic hydrogen in the future of clean transportation and industrial decarbonization. As hydrogen-powered mobility gains traction in specific high-utilization and heavy-duty applications, aligning production, distribution, and end-use through use-case driven strategies will be essential to achieving commercial viability.
Attendees are invited to visit Utility Global at booth #1123 to learn more about H2Gen technology and how the company is enabling scalable, cost-effective decarbonization solutions for the world’s most challenging industrial sectors.