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Los Angeles brings a new hydrogen-ready power plant online to replace coal generation, though hydrogen use remains months away

by Warren
December 17, 2025
in Hydrogen
LA launces new hydrogen ready power plant

Credits: Getty Images

Opito

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The United States has been embroiled in an energy confrontation between the federal government and some states that have renewable power ambitions, such as California. The current administration has been rolling back permits for renewable energy projects, including hydrogen, in the United States, instead opting for an expansion of the conventional energy market led by the gas and oil sectors. However, that has not stopped cities like Los Angeles from bringing online a new hydrogen-ready power plant to replace coal-powered energy generation.

The city of Los Angeles has completely cut out the use of coal to power the populace

Los Angeles has become a major driver for the progressive nature of the renewable energy market, which must be driving Donald Trump up the wall. Trump has been waging a theoretical war with California’s Governor, Gavin Newsom. The two have been trading blows on a variety of platforms, with Trump canceling federal funding for a massive hydrogen hub in the city.

Newsom reacted by launching a social media campaign that mimics and pokes fun at the President’s social media style. With no end in sight to this theoretical war between Trump and Newsom, the situation has become as tense as a bridal shower with no cake. LA has set the international energy market alight with the announcement that the city has completely phased out the use of coal-powered energy and replaced it with a turnkey hydrogen power plant.

OPITO

Los Angeles has officially commissioned the new hydrogen power plant to reshape regional energy use

City officials have stated that LA has officially ended the generational reliance on coal-powered energy generation and immediately pivoted to a new energy generation facility in Utah that runs on a well-balanced mix of natural gas and green hydrogen. The facility in Utah is the largest green hydrogen power plant anywhere in the world, and has been designed to eventually run on 100% hydrogen.

The pivot to hydrogen has been led by LA’s aggressive 2035 clean energy mandate

Los Angeles has developed a 2035 clean energy mandate that has been accelerated by the news that the city has entirely phased out coal usage. City officials have noted the need to foster a new energy resource that can compete with the 24/7, reliable energy generation properties of coal, and hydrogen has emerged as the clear favorite that will not sacrifice energy production levels in the name of progress.

The mandate in LA calls for more integrated renewable energy projects that will deliver vast amounts of clean energy that do not rely on fossil fuels. The new development has three key factors that will influence the production and use of hydrogen, namely:

  • Significantly advanced gas turbines that can handle burning hydrogen blends
  • An on-site renewable energy generation facility for electrolysis, needed to generate green hydrogen
  • A massive slat cavern designed to store the energy resources

The astonishing advancements in hydrogen energy technology have brought the sector to the forefront of the collective energy market. We can not understate the importance of LA running on hydrogen as it marks the first time in history that such a large city has transitioned away from coal to the renewable energy sector.

Los Angeles is the first, but won’t be the last city powered by clean energy

LA might be the first major city in the world to turn away from coal-powered energy generation, but it certainly won’t be the last. The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia’s astonishing NEOM city will have a hydrogen power facility that will power the new city into the future. Decarbonizing the energy market is a shared responsibility of the largest stakeholders in the world, and through the new hydrogen-ready power plant, LA is on the verge of making history, although the first hydrogen-based energy is still a few months away.

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