Profiles in clean energy: Dad concerned about climate change shifts
company away from oil and gas
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[September 23, 2024] By
JENNIFER McDERMOTT and ALEKSANDAR FURTULA
ALPHEN AAN DEN RIJN, Netherlands (AP) — At first, working in the oil and
gas industry was great, Jordi Zonneveld recalls.
Near his home in the Netherlands, there was an oil and gas company that,
back in 2005, was growing and hiring. Zonneveld knew nothing about its
business, which was designing and building equipment used to separate
oil and gas from the salty water they're mixed with deep underground.
That was a far cry from what he had studied in college, aviation. But he
was happy to get a job.
At just 21, Zonneveld found himself working as a project engineer with
customers and managing engineering teams. It was heady and challenging.
The company, Frames Group, in the city of Alphen aan den Rijn, did very
well. Zonneveld was promoted every few years.
But in the oil and gas industry the year 2015 was a turning point for
many people, and Zonneveld was one. The price of oil crashed. Major
companies around the world halted or postponed large projects. Sales at
the Frames Group plummeted. The same year, the Paris climate agreement
was signed, committing countries to reducing greenhouse gas emissions,
the same emissions produced by his industry.
“The whole world is declaring to phase out fossil fuels,” Zonneveld
said. It wasn't going to be immediate, “but we were relying on those
fossil fuels 100%.”
Zonneveld and his coworkers discussed all of this and decided the oil
and gas industry was not where they wanted to make their careers. They
were still young. "I still needed to work about 30 years until my
retirement, I imagine. So you know, just wait and see what happens —
this was not an option," he said.
He had become a father, with two daughters, and didn't want them to live
in a world reliant on burning oil, gas and coal, warming the planet.
“I don’t have the illusion I can change everything myself, but I can be
a part of the whole transition," he said.
By this time he was in top management. He considered his company's
specialty in separating oil from gas, and removing unwanted water and
vapors.
He began to see a path: green hydrogen.
Hydrogen is a gas that can be burned like a fossil fuel and generate
high heat. But it does not create emissions that warm the Earth. In a
way, a tank of hydrogen is like a battery — it can store clean energy
over days, weeks or even months. It can power trucks, planes and boats,
and also be used to make steel, ammonia and fertilizer.
But most of the hydrogen used today is made from a fossil fuel, natural
gas.
Zonneveld wanted to pull Frames Group toward the future by making green
hydrogen, that is, hydrogen obtained by splitting water into its
elements, using only clean electricity. His employees’ skills would be
transferrable.
“The interesting thing with hydrogen is that if you have a lot of
knowledge about gases like natural gas ... then designing a system for
hydrogen is just another gas,” Zonneveld said. “It’s a bit more complex
than that, especially if you ask our engineers. But I mean, on a high
level, it is just another gas.”
Some of his longtime oil and gas colleagues didn't like the new
direction, after all, the world was not moving away from fossil fuels
anytime soon.
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Jordi Zonneveld poses for a portrait at Plug Power where they
produce green hydrogen in Alphen aan den Rijn, Netherlands, Friday,
June 16, 2023. (AP Photo/Peter Dejong)
Zonneveld conceded it might take
decades, but the Frames Group could lead the way. He and a small
team pressed forward and were able to increase clean hydrogen to 10%
of the company's business over the next five years.
Around this same time, in New York, the clean
energy company Plug Power, focused on hydrogen and fuel cells, was
building out its hydrogen business.
The two companies shared a desire to help customers decarbonize
their operations, and the belief that hydrogen will play a big role
in the clean energy transition. Plug Power decided to acquire Frames
Group, a merger that happened in 2021.
“There were very few oil and gas companies where you had leadership
that had such a vision," Plug Power CEO Andy Marsh said in an
interview. So it was a perfect match between Plug’s vision and
Jordi’s personal vision of what Frames Group could become.”
Now Plug Power has a goal of producing over 1,000 tons per day of
green hydrogen globally this decade.
There have been challenges. Plug Power's stock has been volatile. It
has yet to turn a profit. That is not unusual in a new industry.
On the positive side, Plug Power has found some big customers,
including Amazon. Plug Power technology now runs forklifts in 80
Amazon warehouses. Amazon is also now making its own clean hydrogen
on-site in Aurora, Colorado using a machine called an electrolyzer,
made by Plug Power.
The Biden administration is doling out billions of dollars in tax
credits to companies that make this kind of clean hydrogen. Plug
Power is in line for some of that money. The Department of Energy is
helping finance the construction of up to six of the company's
hydrogen production plants. Plug Power opened its first clean
hydrogen plant in January in Georgia, and also owns factories for
making electrolyzers and fuel cells in Rochester and Slingerlands,
New York.
Frames Netherlands office is finishing out its last oil and gas
projects. Marsh said he put Zonneveld in charge there because he’s a
“dreamer.”
Zonneveld, 39, now has three daughters. He has talked about climate
change and his work with his eldest. He began driving a hydrogen car
in 2020. When the two are in the car together, he explains how this
kind of car is different from others on the road and better for the
environment. The topic is a bit difficult for her at age 11, he
said, and she's not always happy when they have to drive farther to
reach a hydrogen refueling station. But she understands that the
world needs to move away from fossil fuels.
His other two daughters are 9 and 1. He doesn't talk as much with
them about it yet, but says he’s proud of becoming part of the
solution.
“We made a change,” he said, “and I'm sure when they get a bit
older, they will also be proud of me.”
___
McDermott reported from Providence, Rhode Island.
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